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SUMMARY Behavior Psychology (EXAM PREPARATION )

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This summary is focused on the lectures of this course (that's because they mentioned that the book isn't really needed and that the lectures are the guideline for the exam). Therefore this summary will help you to successfully complete this course! (will be updated every friday)

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Subido en
18 de noviembre de 2022
Archivo actualizado en
16 de diciembre de 2022
Número de páginas
40
Escrito en
2022/2023
Tipo
Resumen

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Lecture 1
Ancient world: Parents pass on characteristics to offspring
 Pythagoras suggested that the father supplies the essential characteristics (“form”) and the
mother supplies the material building blocks
 Aristotle thought children were made from “purified blood from the testes” (semen) and
menstrual blood

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (1632 – 1723) and Nicolaas Hartsoeker (1656 –1725)
 Invented the microscope and started the field of microbiology
 They developed/refined the Theory of Preformationism: we all come from miniature
versions of ourselves. Sperm contain complete preformed individuals called “homunculus"
 What are the flaws with that theory? (And a benefit?)
- No influence of new environments
- If only men provided the offspring and the mother only functioned to provide nutrition, how
could females then be born?
- It should already have a little homunculus in it already, and one in him etc
- Benefit: at the time is provided evidence that the nature of humans were in line with the
bible (Adam and Eva)

Francis Galton (1822-1911): founded psychometrics, differential psychology, and behavior genetics
 He studied twins and family trees (pedigree) to understand hereditary (genetic influences)
 E.g. Eminent status was more likely to appear in close relatives, with the likelihood of
eminence decreasing as the degree of relationship became more remote
 “Nature prevails enormously over nurture.”  that parents also pass on the environment
and not only genes

Darwin: Voyage of the Beagle most important trip for science
 The idea of “blending inheritance”  Though Darwin was on the
right track about many things, he was terribly off track about the
mechanism behind inheritance. As were everyone else before
Mendel!!
 Charles Darwin’s Theory of Pangenesis: contributions to egg or
sperm from every part of the body. Also implied blending
inheritance
 What is the problem with these “blending” theories of
inheritance? How does it affect the Theory of Natural Selection?
- No variety if everything is blended!  consequence: there
is nothing to be selected  every variation will be
averaged out
- If you blend elements, you can never get it’s origin back


Gregor Mendel (1822-1884)  Mendel concluded that there are:
 two “elements” of heredity for each trait in each individual (dominant and recessive)
 these two elements separate, or segregate, during reproduction.
 Offspring receive one of the two elements from each parent.
 These conclusions are the essence of Mendel’s first law The
Law of Segregation
 The Punnett square: a diagram used to predict the
genotypes of a cross or breeding experiment. Useful to
determine the probability of an offspring having a
particular genotype

, - Dominant Allele (Upper case “S”) An allele that expresses its phenotypic effect even when
heterozygous with a recessive allele. So, if S is dominant over s, then SS and Ss have the same
phenotype
- Recessive Allele (Lower case “s” or any other letter) An allele whose phenotypic effect is not
expressed in a heterozygote. It is only expressed when
homozygous, like if s is recessive over S, only ss would
show the recessive phenotype.
 saved the theory of selection and vanished away the theory of
blending
What happened when Mendel looked at two or more traits at
the same time?
 Mendel’s 2nd law The Law of Independent Assortment:
The inheritance pattern of one trait will not affect the
inheritance pattern of another (inheritance of one traits is
independent of the inheritance of other traits)  so
independent of each other, but dependent on the
segregation of the trait itself

Humans have two genomes: one from the father and one from the mother

Mendelian Disorders: Controlled by one gene and therefor easy to predict
Huntington’s Disease:
 Brain disorder causing progressive deterioration of the physical, cognitive and emotional self
 It leads to severe incapacitation and eventual death
 It usually affects adults (30–45 yr)
 Symptoms: uncontrollable movements, abnormal balance when
walking, slurred speech, thinking difficulties, and personality changes
 There is no cure and no effective treatment
 Dominant effect: The allele that causes the disease is dominant 
50% of the kids will also have the disease (if only the father has the
gene); if both the father and the mother have the gene 75% of the kids
will have the disease; if one of the parents has both dominant
hutington alleles, 100% of the kids will have the disease.
PKU (Phenylketonuria):
 PKU is a metabolic disorder caused by a deficiency of the liver enzyme
phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH)
 It prevents normal metabolization of phenylalanine (Phe) which is
present in protein rich foods
 Damage occurs to the nervous system leading to mental retardation
 Prevention is fairly simple! Diet
 Recessive effect: The allele that causes PKU is Recessive  only 25% of the kids will have the
disease (if the parents both have heterozygous alleles)
Hemophilia:
 Can’t stop bleeding
 On the X chromosome
Exceptions to Mendel’s second law (The law of independent assortment
(inheritance of one gene is not affected by the inheritance of another gene))
The law holds:
 For genes on different chromosomes
 For genes that are far apart on the same chromosome (e.g. color and
shape)
The law DOES NOT hold for:

,  Genes in close proximity on the same chromosome (mostly passed on together)
 X-linked inheritance: sex-dependent transmission  cannot split from the sex chromosome
- e.g. color blindness  color-blind-father = 0% of sons; color-blind-mother= 100% of sons
 because it is a recessive allele only on the X chromosome
- for daughters to get color blindness both of the parents need to have color blindness
(then also the sons will have it), in general more males can only get color blindness if the
mom is a carrier  because men
 Quantitative Traits (Complex traits)  even here the mendelian laws of genetics keep
important




Lecture 2
Most people are almost identical due to the same atoms in our DNA: oxygen, carbon, hydrogen,
nitrogen, calcium; and molecules in our body : Water (almost 99%), lipids, protein, RNA, DNA

Building blocks From a physics/chemistry angle:
 We consist of atoms → molecules
 A particular combination and arrangement of molecules → life
 Differences in organisms due to different molecular composition

Complexity:
 Describing behavior by physics/chemistry laws is very difficult
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