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Environmental Influences on Behavior Module 6. Environment and Brain Development Enriched environments enhance brain development.

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Presentation on theme: "Environmental Influences on Behavior Module 6. Environment and Brain Development Enriched environments enhance brain development."— Presentation transcript:

1 Environmental Influences on Behavior Module 6

2 Environment and Brain Development Enriched environments enhance brain development.

3 Experience and Faculties Early experiences during development in humans show remarkable improvements in music, languages and the arts. Courtesy of C. Brune

4 Brain Development and Adulthood Our brains change over the course of our lifetimes. Both hotos courtesy of Avi Kani and Leslie Ungerleider, National Institue of Mental Health

5 How Much Credit (or Blame) Do Parents Deserve? Parental influence is largely genetic…(ouch). Culture and peers play a role. Although raised in the same family, some children are greater risk takers. Miquel L. Fairbanks

6 Peer Influence Peers are influential !...watch out for conformity. Ole Graf/ zefa/ Corbis

7 Environmental Influence  Culture  the enduring behaviors, ideas, attitudes, and traditions shared by a large group of people and transmitted from one generation to the next  Norm  an understood rule for accepted and expected behavior

8 Variation Across Culture Cultures differ. Each culture develops norms… Jason Reed/ Reuters/Corbis

9 American women did not shave their armpits until the early 20’s And legs were not bare until the 40’s

10 Variation Over Time Cultures change over time. This change cannot be attributed to changes in the human gene pool because genes evolve very slowly.

11 Culture and the Self If a culture nurtures an individual’s personal identity, it is said to be individualist. If a group identity is favored then the culture is described as collectivist. Kyodo News

12 Culture and Child-Rearing Individualist cultures (European) raise their children as independent individuals whereas collectivist cultures (Asian/African) raise their children as interdependent. Jose Luis Palaez, Inc./ Corbis

13 Individualist/Collectivist Westernized CulturesAsian-African Cultures Responsible for your selfResponsible to group Follow your consciencePriority to obedience Discover your giftsBe true to family-self Be true to yourselfBe loyal to your group Be independentBe interdependent

14 Developmental Similarities Across Groups Humans are more similar than different. Copyright Steve Reehl

15 Gender Development Based on genetic makeup, males and females are more alike than different,….the majority of our inherited genes (45 chromosomes are unisex) are similar. Males and females differ biologically in body fat, muscle, height, onset of puberty, and life expectancy.

16 Gender Differences in Aggression Men express themselves and behave in more aggressive ways than do women. This aggression gender gap appears in many cultures and at various ages. In males, the nature of this aggression is physical.

17 Gender and Social Power In most societies, men are socially dominant and are perceived as such. In 2005, men accounted for 84% of the governing parliaments.

18 Gender Differences and Connectedness Young and old, women form more connections (friendships) with people than do men. Men emphasize freedom and self- reliance. Oliver Eltinger/ Zefa/ Corbis Dex Image/ Getty Images

19 The Nature and Nurture of Gender  X Chromosome  the sex chromosome found in both men and women  females have two; males have one  an X chromosome from each parent produces a female child  Y Chromosome  the sex chromosome found only in men  when paired with an X chromosome from the mother, it produces a male child

20 Biology of Sex Biological sex is determined by the twenty-third pair of chromosomes.

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25 The Nature and Nurture of Gender  Testosterone  the most important of the male sex hormones  both males and females have it  additional testosterone in males stimulates  growth of male sex organs in the fetus  development of male sex characteristics during puberty

26 Sexual Differentiation In the mother’s womb, the male fetus is exposed to testosterone (because of the Y chromosome), which leads to the development of male genitalia. If low levels of testosterone are released in the uterus, the result is female genitalia.

27 Disorders of differentiation… What if you are neither…. AIS Tell about undiscovered case from bio-psych…

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30 Disorders of Differentiation…

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34 Sexual Differentiation Sexual differentiation is not only biological, but also psychological and social.

35 Gender Roles Our culture shapes our gender roles — expectations of how men and women are supposed to behave. Gender Identity — means how a person views himself or herself in terms of gender.

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42 http://www.flickr.com/photos/kokogia k/66087367/

43 The Nature and Nurture of Gender  Gender and Culture

44 The Nature and Nurture of Gender

45 Stereotype threat….

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47 Gender Roles: Theories 1.Social Learning Theory proposes that we learn gender behavior like any other behavior—reinforcement, punishment, and observation. 2.Gender Schema Theory suggests that we learn a cultural “recipe” of how to be a male or a female, which influences our gender- based perceptions and behaviors.

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51 Gender Roles: Theories


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