Genetics
The Brain
Hormones
Interactions
Evaluation
100

What is one gene linked to violence and aggression?

The Warrior (MAOA) gene - MAOA-L

100

What does the PFC do?

Any of the following:

- regulates behaviour

- planning and decision making

- acts as the "brakes" on our impulsive behaviour

100

What hormones affects aggression?

Testosterone

100

What is neuroplasticity?

The brain's ability to change as a result of experience.

100

How does neuroplasticity show a limitation in the nature debate?

It shows that our brain is affected by nurture.

200

What is a "nativist?"

Someone who is on the nature side of the nature vs nurture debate. 

They believe all behaviour is from nature. 

200

What does the amygdala do?

Activates the flight or fight response

Allows us to make moral decisions and feel empathy

Emotional centre - anger and fear in particular

200

What animals did Berthold study on?

Chickens (roosters)

200

What is epigenetics?

Environment affecting genes

200

Animal studies, case studies and studies on children have limitations based on generalisability. What is "generalisability?"

Being able to apply the results to a new context, e.g. different people, places, times, etc. 


For instance, you can condition a pigeon to turn in a circle, but does that mean you can condition something to commit murder? Thus, the results of Skinner's pigeon studies might not be generalisable to humans and human behaviours.

300

What are two pieces of evidence that tell us the MAOA-L gene is linked with violence

Finnish prison study: all extremely violent criminals had the MAOA-L and one other gene. You're x13 more likely to commit crime if you have it.

Dunedin study showed MAOA-L + a bad childhood increases antisocial behaviour


300

What is one animal study that tells us the amygdala plays a role in aggression?

Rat lasers: when they hooked up the rat's brain to the laser and turned it off and on, the researchers could control its aggression

300
Name two hormones that influence behaviour.

Possible answers:

- testosterone

- oxytocin 

- melatonin

- estrogen

- adrenaline

- cortisol

300

What are three ways the nature argument has changed over time?

Galton believed it was all genes, now we know about epigenetics.


We used to think genetics caused bad brains but now we know about neuroplasticity. 


We used to think testosterone caused aggression but now we know it's more to do with status

300

How does epigenetics highlight a limitation of the nurture debate?

It shows that our genes are affected by nurture.

400

What is MAOA?

An enzyme that breaks down neurotransmitters in the synapse

400

What were the results of the Vietnam head injury study?

Veterans with damage to their vmPFC were more aggressive. 

This shows that one function of our PFC is to regulate our violent and impulsive actions. 

400

People have thought for a long time that testosterone causes aggression. New research suggests that it only affects aggression if the aggression helps to maintain ....what? 

Social status

400

How does the Dunedin study demonstrate epigenetics?

It shows antisocial behaviour is influenced by the MAOA-L gene AND maltreatment as a child. 

400

What is the most common critique of behaviourism?

It focuses too much on to little

In other words, they only focus on conditioning as the single explanation of behaviour, when we know it's more complicated than that.

500

Why does the MAOA-L gene increase aggression?

Possible answers:

- it reduces activity in the PFC and increases activity in the amygdala 

- it affects neurotransmitters like serotonin and dopamine

500
Imagine you've scanned two murderers brains. One was a serial killer. The other was a man who killed someone in a fit of rage. Describe what you would expect to see in the functioning of their amygdala and their PFC.

Serial killer: high activity in PFC, low activity or smaller amygdala


Impulsive killer: low activity in PFC, high activity in amygdala

500

Testosterone increases activity in what part of the brain?

What study showed this?

Amygdala

Goetz (2014) Radke 2017 (fMRI)

500
Summarise the results of a study that demonstrates neuroplasticity.

R&B: rats in enriched environments grew bigger frontal lobes than those in deprived.

Romanian orphans: 8.6% smaller brains than healthy children

Maguire: London taxi drivers have different hippocampi to bus drivers

Draganski: juggling changes the brain. 

McCrory: ACEs affects the amygdala

500

Mr Dixon taught his first ever class as an English teacher in the Library. True or False?

False. I was a History teacher and I taught my first ever class in the Hare memorial room, Mr Lidstone's old classroom. 

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