Chapter 3: Gene, Environment, and Behavior
Genotype: the specific genetic makeup of the individual
Phenotype: the individual’s observable characteristics
Chromosome: is a double-stranded and tightly coiled molecule of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
Genes: biological units of heredity
Alleles: alternative forms of a gene that produce different characteristics
Dominant: the particular characteristic that it controls will be displayed
Recessive: the characteristic will not show up unless the partner gene inherited from the other parent is also recessive
Polygenic Transmission: a number of gene pairs combine their influences to create a single phenotypic trait
Epigenetics: Changes in gene expression that are independent of the DNA itself and are caused instead by environmental factors
Family Studies: researchers study relatives to determine if genetic similarity is related to similarity on a particular trait
Adoption Study: in which people who were adopted early in life are compared on some characteristic with both their biological parents, with whom they share genetic endowment, and with their adoptive parents, with whom they share no genes
Twin Studies: which compare trait similarities in identical and fraternal twins
Concordance: trait similarity
Heritability Coefficient: estimates the extent to which the differences, or variation, in a specific phenotypic characteristic within a group of people can be attributed to their differing genes
Adaptive Significance: how behavior influences an organism’s chances of survival and reproduction in its natural environment.
Shared Environment: the people who reside in them experience many of their features in common
Evocative Influence: a child’s genetically influenced behaviors may evoke certain responses from others
Biologically Based Mechanisms: enable us to take in, process, and respond to information, predisposing us to behave, to feel, and even to think in specific ways
Evolution: change over time in the frequency with which particular genes and the characteristics they produce occur within an interbreeding population
Natural Selection: characteristics that increase the likelihood of survival and reproduction within a particular environment will be more likely to be preserved in the population and, therefore, will become more common in the species over time
Adaptations: physical or behavioral changes that allow organisms to meet recurring environmental challenges to their survival, thereby increasing their reproductive ability.
Evoked Culture: Cultures may themselves be products of biological mechanisms that evolved to meet specific adaptation challenges faced by specific groups of people in specific places at specific times.
Sexual Strategies Theory: mating strategies and preferences reflect inherited tendencies, shaped over the ages in response to different types of adaptive problems that men and women faced
Social Structure Theory: maintain that men and women display different mating preferences not because nature impels them to do so but because society guides them into different social roles.
Strategic Pluralism: the idea that multiple- even contradictory- behavioral strategies
Genotype: the specific genetic makeup of the individual
Phenotype: the individual’s observable characteristics
Chromosome: is a double-stranded and tightly coiled molecule of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
Genes: biological units of heredity
Alleles: alternative forms of a gene that produce different characteristics
Dominant: the particular characteristic that it controls will be displayed
Recessive: the characteristic will not show up unless the partner gene inherited from the other parent is also recessive
Polygenic Transmission: a number of gene pairs combine their influences to create a single phenotypic trait
Epigenetics: Changes in gene expression that are independent of the DNA itself and are caused instead by environmental factors
Family Studies: researchers study relatives to determine if genetic similarity is related to similarity on a particular trait
Adoption Study: in which people who were adopted early in life are compared on some characteristic with both their biological parents, with whom they share genetic endowment, and with their adoptive parents, with whom they share no genes
Twin Studies: which compare trait similarities in identical and fraternal twins
Concordance: trait similarity
Heritability Coefficient: estimates the extent to which the differences, or variation, in a specific phenotypic characteristic within a group of people can be attributed to their differing genes
Adaptive Significance: how behavior influences an organism’s chances of survival and reproduction in its natural environment.
Shared Environment: the people who reside in them experience many of their features in common
Evocative Influence: a child’s genetically influenced behaviors may evoke certain responses from others
Biologically Based Mechanisms: enable us to take in, process, and respond to information, predisposing us to behave, to feel, and even to think in specific ways
Evolution: change over time in the frequency with which particular genes and the characteristics they produce occur within an interbreeding population
Natural Selection: characteristics that increase the likelihood of survival and reproduction within a particular environment will be more likely to be preserved in the population and, therefore, will become more common in the species over time
Adaptations: physical or behavioral changes that allow organisms to meet recurring environmental challenges to their survival, thereby increasing their reproductive ability.
Evoked Culture: Cultures may themselves be products of biological mechanisms that evolved to meet specific adaptation challenges faced by specific groups of people in specific places at specific times.
Sexual Strategies Theory: mating strategies and preferences reflect inherited tendencies, shaped over the ages in response to different types of adaptive problems that men and women faced
Social Structure Theory: maintain that men and women display different mating preferences not because nature impels them to do so but because society guides them into different social roles.
Strategic Pluralism: the idea that multiple- even contradictory- behavioral strategies