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Announcements

Announcements. Final 8:00, Friday, May 11. ( A-L here; M-Z 100 MSEB ). Predictions:. females. males. Women prefer less masculine male faces (and men prefer more masculine faces in women) for long term relationships under conditions of environmental harshness.

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Announcements

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  1. Announcements Final 8:00, Friday, May 11. (A-L here; M-Z 100 MSEB)

  2. Predictions:

  3. females males

  4. Women prefer less masculine male faces (and men prefer more masculine faces in women) for long term relationships under conditions of environmental harshness. Consistent with idea that high-quality partners may be low investors and suggests that under harsh ecological conditions, men and women prefer a low quality / high investment partner for long term relationships.

  5. Behavior and relatedness Like many animals, social groups in humans are often made up of related individuals.

  6. Behavior and relatedness

  7. Behavioral Syndromes correlation of behavior across multiple contexts for example, aggression (territorial disputes vs. mating) Same as personality in humans?

  8. The nature of personality Growing consensus that many descriptors of personality can be characterized into five broad underlying dimensions of personality (The Big Five Model – John, 1990) Extraversion assertive, energetic, quiet, shy, withdrawn sociable Neuroticism anxious, emotional, calm, at ease, unemotional moody Conscientiousness dependable, organized, careless, irresponsible practical frivolous Agreeableness cooperative, generous, cold, quarrelsome, selfish warm Openness curious, imaginative, shallow, simple insightful High score Low score Tendency to be engaged Tendency toward neg.moods Tendency to plan & conform Tend to cooperate Tend toward diversity

  9. The nature of personality Extraversion extroverted introverted Neuroticism nervous, high-strung calm, relaxed Conscientiousness conscientious disorganized Agreeableness agreeable disagreeable Openness open to new experiences close-minded Low score High score Take the Big Five test: http://www.outofservice.com/bigfive/

  10. The nature of personality • Assessment of individual differences on these 5 dimensions can be determined reliably by self-report • Personality is predictive of a wide range of social and work-related behavior and some behavioral pathology, personality can be an independent risk factor for mental health problems • Individuals who are impulsive and disinhibited in childhood have elevated risk of alcoholism and other substance abuse disorders in adulthood – Caspi et al 1996 • Clinical depression hypothesized to be due to high levels of neuroticism coupled with low levels of extraversion – Watson et al 1994

  11. Twin Studies on Personality • Additive genetic factors account for 40-60% of the variance in personality • Shared environmental influences are negligible • Non-shared environmental effects account for 50% of the variance -different experiences in the same environment-differential parental treatment of siblings or favoritism -different experiences in different environments --having different friends in school -reacting to the same event in different ways-parental divorce

  12. Adoption Studies on Personality • Consistently find little/no personality similarity among adoptive relatives • Loehlin (1992) – compute weighted-average correlation between nonbiologically related siblings reared together • Extraversion (3 studies, n=258) -0.07 • Neuroticism (3 studies, n=258) 0.11 • Agreeableness (2 studies, n=250) 0.06 • Conscientiousness (2 studies, n=245) 0.02 • Openness (2 studies, n=241) 0.06

  13. Genes involved with personality DRD4 Serotonin transporter gene, 5HTT Monoamine Oxidase Nitric oxide synthase Fos B

  14. Cell. 1996 Jul 26;86(2):297-309. A defect in nurturing in mice lacking the immediate early gene fosB. Brown JR, Ye H, Bronson RT, Dikkes P, Greenberg ME.

  15. The Fos family of transcription factors • are induced by environmental stimuli that trigger adaptive neuronal response. • fosB mutant mice are profoundly deficient in their ability to nurture • young animals but are normal with respect to other cognitive and • sensory functions. • The nurturing defect is likely due to the absence of FosB in the • preoptic area, a region of the hypothalamus critical for nurturing. • These observations suggest that a transcription factor controls a • complex behavior by regulating a specific neuronal circuit • - indicates nurturing in mammals has a genetic component.

  16. Association of dopamine D4 receptor (DRD4) with novelty seeking • Neurotransmitter dopamine has been implicated in brain reward and approach systems • Novely seeking does not align precisely with any one of the big 5 personality factors but is associated with high levels of extraversion and low levels of conscientiousness • Impulsive, exploratory and extravagant

  17. Elovainio, et al. 2005. The mediating role of novelty seeking in the association between the type 4-dopamine receptor gene polymorphism and cigarette-smoking behavior. Examined the relationship between variation at type 4 dopamine receptor gene and cigarette-smoking behavior and the mediating role of the temperamental novelty seeking. The two- and five-repeat alleles were significantly more common in the group of current smokers than others (ratio 2.53). After controlling for the effect of novelty seeking on smoking behavior, the relationship dropped substantially, being no longer statistically significant.

  18. Neuroticism and the serotonin transporter gene http://www.driesen.com/ssrireuptake.jpg Serotonin is 5-HT (5-hydroxytryptamine), serotonin transporter is 5-HTT

  19. 5-HT is serotonin 5-HTT--serontonin transporter (presynaptic side) 5-HTT is also the target of cocaine and methylphenidate 5-HT receptors are stimulated by LSD

  20. Association of the serotonin transporter with disease Polymorphisms in 5-HTT in the promoter region 16-repeat- l long 14-repeat-s short ‘s’ is associated with reduced transcription and is dominant to ‘l’ Individuals with at least one copy of ‘s’ scored higher on Neuroticism Association with 5-HTT has been reported for violent suicide and early onset alcoholism

  21. Dopamine plays a role in novelty-seeking behavior Serotonin is important for neuroticism Studies in knock-out mice Null mutants for the serotonin 1a receptor (5-HT1A) show elevated levels of anxiety Null mutants for 5-HT1B show reductions in anxiety and elevations in aggression mutation in a single Dutch family correlates with violent behavior Null mutants for DRD4 show reduced response to novelty

  22. The interaction between low serotonin and high testosterone levels in • the central nervous system has a significant effect on the neural • mechanisms involved in the expression of aggressive behavior. • Testosterone modulates serotonergic receptor activity in a way that • directly affects aggression, fear and anxiety.

  23. Schizophrenia • A chronic, severe and disabling brain disease • Characterized by profound disturbances of cognition, emotion, and social functioning • 1% of the population develops Schizophrenia during their lifetime • Affects men and women equally – men in late teens and early 20s; women in 20s and 30s • Central features include both “positive” (additional behaviors) and “negative” (loss of normal behaviors) symptoms

  24. Schizophrenia Some people have only one psychotic episode during their lifetime Others have many episodes during a lifetime but lead relatively normal lives during the interim Individuals with chronic or recurring schizophrenia often do not fully recover There is no definitive marker: diagnosis is made on self-reporting

  25. Schizophrenia - symptoms • hallucinations • delusions • disorganization of thoughts • bizarre behavior • incongruity of affect (improper behavior relative to the specific situation

  26. Schizophrenia - symptoms Males have an earlier age of onset than females male incidence peaks in mid-20s female incidence peaks around 30 second, lower incident peak around menopause

  27. Schizophrenia – evidence for a genetic influence • runs in families • 40-50% risk for monozygotic twins • 10% risk to child of affected parent

  28. Schizophrenia – evidence for a genetic influence Evidence suggests that the predisposition is inherited, not the certainty of developing Schizophrenia itself.

  29. Genetic models for Schizophrenia • Based on family studies, current models support existence of two or three susceptibility loci • liability alleles confer ~ two-fold increase in risk to the sibling of an affected individual • Linkage studies support this model – identification of several weakly-linked regions of the genome

  30. Environmental Factors • Schizophrenics are more likely to be born in winter or early spring Why? some seasonally varying factor alters the developing CNS, increasing an individual’s lifetime risk parents of schizophrenic patients have an unusual pattern of conception One of the most consistent findings in schizophrenia is that the distribution of birth dates of individuals with schizophrenia differs from that of the general population.

  31. Are there genes for behaviors? “anxiety and aggression” gene? http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/01/030123072840.htm “alocholism” gene? Gene Linked To Alcoholism Alcoholism tends to run in families, suggesting that addiction, at least in part, has an underlying genetic cause. Now, researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago have discovered a gene linked to alcohol dependency. Laboratory mice deficient in the gene were found to consume excessive amounts of alcohol, preferring ethanol to water and evincing highly anxious behavior in a maze test. Drunken Fruit Flies Reveal Molecular Pathway Regulating Sensitivity To Alcohol (June 17, 1998) -- Researchers at UC San Francisco have identified a molecular pathway in intoxicated fruit flies that is responsible for regulating the flies' meandering, wobbling responses to alcohol. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/05/040526063645.htm

  32. Variation in a gene called VMAT-vesicular monoamine transporter 2 C-correlates with self- transcendence, which correlates with spirituality A-does not Reported in a book by Dr. Dean Hamer, The God Gene: How faith is hardwired Into our genes Chief of gene structure, NCI

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