Week 2 (readings & lab) Flashcards

1
Q

evolutionary psychology was apart of what wave of the cognitive revolution?

A

the second wave

wave 1: 
- computational processes 
  generate knowledge about 
  the world (perception, 
  attention, and reasoning). 
- the mind was perceived to be 
  a blank slate that was free of 
  content until written by 
  experience before the 
  analogy that the mind is a 
  switchboard emerged.
- learning mechanisms in the 
  brain were believed to be 
  domain-general (i.e., respond 
  the same to all content).
= cognitive psychology
wave 2: 
- views the brain as being 
  composed of evolved 
  computational systems, 
  engineered by natural 
  selection, to use the 
  information to adaptively 
  regulate physiology and 
  behavior (i.e., the shift from 
  knowledge acquisition to the 
  adaptive regulation of 
  behavior). 
- focuses on adaptive 
  specializations that are 
  triggered by specific stimuli 
  rather than domain- 
  general.
- there are adaptive cognitions 
  and motivations for their 
  ancestors, hunter-gatherers, 
  that are still present today but 
  not necessarily still 
  useful/adaptive. 
- It combines theories from 
  biology, psychology, 
  anthropology and cognitive 
  neuroscience.
= evolutionary psychology
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2
Q

From the evolutionary perspective:

A
- every organ, including the 
  brain, has an evolved 
  function (the brain is 
  computer designed to extract 
  and process information from 
  the environment to guide 
  behaviour).
- they've evolved through 
  natural selection to 
  responded to changes in the 
  environment and aid 
  reproductive success.
- programs within the brain 
  have evolved from our 
  ancestors and were passed 
  on because they meet the 
  selective pressures of their 
  environment and still exist 
  today but may not be useful 
  in the current environment.
- quantitative (simple) traits 
  can evolve faster but it still 
  takes thousands of years 
  (generations; more than an 
  individuals lifetime) for 
  natural selection to evolve 
  complex brain programs.
- modern environments are very different 
  from ancestral ones 
(hunting/gathering/cooperation/predators 
vs cars/people/technology/trees vs 
buildings).
- natural selection is combined with 
  replicator dynamics () and game theory 
  we can understand adaptive behavior.
- evolutionary psychologists claim 
  information processing is functionally 
  specialised or domain-specific.
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3
Q

domain general programs…

A

can not produce adaptive behavior unless they interact with domain-specific programs.

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4
Q

how do we find out if a current trait is an adaption?

A

we search for problems in our ancestral history and try to find variations or adaptations that could’ve solved this issue.

It allows us to form testable hypotheses about the structure of programs in the mind.

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5
Q

The advantages of using an evolutionary psychology framework:

A
- the importance of 
  considering ancestral 
  environments.
- studies and models on 
  hunter-gatherers from 
  behaviour ecology discipline  
  and combines it with 
  psychology findings to take 
  research in new directions.
- evolutionary game theory 
  allows us to make testable 
  hypotheses on the cognitive. 
 design (evolution of programs)
- hypothesis on adaptations 
  are compared with alternative 
  hypothesis
- content-specific programs
- computational programs
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6
Q

Evolutionary Psychology on Visual Attention:

A
- few studies have looked at 
  the evolved programs being 
  evolutionary systems 
  designed to deploy attention 
  to specific stimuli in the 
  environment independent to 
  individual goals/motivation.
- low-level visual systems 
  assess the shape and color of 
  stimuli so is not beneficial for 
  scanning the environment for 
  friends and foe.
- task/goal-relevant visual 
  systems are a sophisticated 
  monitoring system to identify 
  friends and foes in their 
  immediate environment.
- have these sophisticated 
  systems evolved to specialize 
  in attending to human faces? 
  the alternative hypothesis is 
  that these systems are 
  domain-general and respond 
  to all stimuli the same way. 
  Individuals with Autism rule 
  out this theory because it 
  selectively disrupts attention 
  to faces and not all stimuli.
Animal Monitoring:
- spotting animals was a useful 
  tool for our ancestors which is 
  not so useful now; spotting 
  moving vehicles is a 
  beneficial skill in the current 
  environment.
- New et al. (2007) use a 
  change detection task to see 
  if participants were better 
  able to detect the same 
  change in the environment 
  between very similar pictures 
  when it was object or animal- 
  related.
- the change blindness 
  phenomenon is when the 
  change is not spotted.
*change blindness is limited to 
 inanimate objects meaning 
 that individuals are better able 
 to detect changes in the  
 state/location of animals better 
 than objects. Animals/humans 
 detected better than inanimate  
 objects.
Where did the animal monitoring system evolve from?
- New et al. (2007) tested the
  phylogenetic (old animal 
  monitoring over generations) 
  and ontogenetic (new vehicle 
  monitoring within individuals 
  lifetime) hypotheses.
- animals vs vehicles:
- the speed and accuracy of 
  change detection were better 
  for animals than vehicles. This 
  supports the phylogenetic 
  hypothesis that animal 
  monitoring systems are 
  context-specific attentional 
  systems triggered by 
  animals.
  • animals vs faces.
  • if accuracy and speed of
    change detection is better in
    people than animals then this
    would indicate that familiarity
    with stimuli influences
    performance. This hypothesis
    was not supported and they
    found marginal differences in
    humans’ ability to detect
    changes in animals or
    humans.
  • this implies that attentional
    systems evolved from hunter-
    gatherers and are content-
    specific systems to detecting
    changes in animals and faces.
Automatic Regulation of Attention by High-Level Social Cues:
- evolved function of ingroup- 
  outgroup bias aided hunter- 
  gatherers by helping them 
  distinguish between and recall 
  information about ingroup 
  members and view outgroup 
  members all the same 
  (outgroup homogeneity/cross- 
  race recognition).
- is this system triggered by 
  angry faces?
- Ackerman et al. (2006) found 
  that white people recognized 
  black/angry better than or just 
  as good as white/neutral.  
-  even with distractions and 
  time constraints.
- the outgroup homogeneity 
  and cross-race recognition 
  bias can be reversed when 
  threats are present (angry 
  outgroup members for black 
  not white faces; ingroup angry 
  faces are not as much of a 
  threat and not a part of the 
  cognitive specific system)
-  white faces were processed 
  equally fast when they were 
  neutral or angry.
*spontaneous automatic 
 program activation to  
 ancestrally relevant cues rather 
 than in response to  
 participant's explicit current  
 violations goal.
Spatial Cognition & Navigation:
- are their sex differences in 
  human behavior?
- are they sexually 
  monomorphic or dimorphic 
  sex differences in spatial 
  cognition and navigation.
- from an evolutionary 
  psychology perspective we 
  would not expect there to be 
  sex differences if the problem 
  the system evolved to address 
  is the same for both sexes.
- sex differences occur when 
  the adaptive problem 
  systematically impacts men 
  and women different.
- spatial cognition specialized 
  for foraging:
- men better at mental rotation 
  for hunting and women are 
  better at spatial and 
  navigational skills that allow 
  them to find and remember 
  where food sources are in 
  their environment relative to 
  other plants.
- New et al. (2007) study with 
  the farmers market where 
  women were better at 
  remembering the location of 
  food-related items and males 
  at non-food-related items.
- content-specific systems 
  which evolved from sex 
  differences in skills needed to 
  meet the selective pressures 
  of their environment.

Kransnow et al. (2011) confirmed that its the absolute location being held in spatial memory better in women than men AND is highly specific to fruit and not inanimate objects.

The nutritional content of food (calories). In accordance with the optimal foraging theory, we see that people exert more energy to find food resources with higher calorie content than others (in men and women; independent effect on performance to gender! context matters).

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7
Q

computational adaptations

A

evolved systems designed (by natural selection) to monitor information and use it to functionally regulate their physiology or behaviour.

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8
Q

environment of evolutionary adaptiveness

A

the series of ancestral environments/selection pressures that sculpted the design of an adaption

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9
Q

replicator dynamics

A

how genes change in frequency in the population

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10
Q

Siberian Fox Breeding:

A
- example of artificial breeding 
  where humans selectively 
  breed animals to pass on a 
  specific genetic variation, like 
  friendliness onto the offspring 
  in an attempt to domesticate 
  Siberian Foxs.
- Dmitrybelyaev is a Russian 
  geneticist (1917-1985) who 
  came up with the radical idea 
  that domesticated animals are 
  friendly towards humans due 
  to genetics. 
- wolves transitioned into dogs 
  naturally over time where 
  friendliness was selected for 
  so they could I've besides 
  humans.
- tame does not mean man's 
  best friend. Fox's are still 
  mischievous and not as 
  hypersocial as dogs.
-  dogs were friendly and 
   socialized but foxes were the 
   only ones bred for the 
   friendliness genes.
- the friendliness gene could 
  be theoretically applied to 
  other animals to domesticate 
  them as well.
  domestication syndrome 
  where behavioral traits 
  changes coincide with 
  physical changes in the fur 
  coat, floppy ears, skull shape.
Artificial selection: 
- the genes we want to select 
  for are dependent on the 
  genes in the wolf population.
- we are selecting for specific 
  genes in the gene sequence.
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11
Q

True or false questions about artificial selection:

A
 Traits/features occur because 
   an organism needs or wants 
   them?
o Myth! This is false, adaptions 
   are the result of random 
   genetic variations where 
   adaptive traits are preserved 
   and unadaptive traits die out. 
   Individuals cannot evolve 
   genetically, poulations 
   evolve!
 Traits or features are 
   gradually lost because 
   they’re not used?
o Myth! This is false because 
   loss occurs through a number 
   of processes including 
   natural selection (which 
   works at a population level 
   and is linked to whether the 
   trait improves the 
   reproductive success of the 
   group, if not it is lost over 
   time).
 Environmental variations 
   which occur during an 
   organisms life cannot be 
   passed on to offspring?
o True! Environmental 
   varitations cannot be passed 
   onto offspring. Only genetic 
   variation is inheritble.
o But: genes can be switched 
   on and off through cheical 
   processes (acivation or de- 
  activation) through 
   envioronmental effects (e.g., 
   famine and epigenetics). In 
   otherwords, environment 
   influences which genes are 
   expressed and passed on 
   across generations.
 Not all genetic variations are 
   useful?
o True! Variation is random! 
   Therefore, it can be benifical, 
   neutral or harmful. It often 
   depends on how the trait is 
   expressed (homo vs hetero 
   form).
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12
Q

Phenologies:

A
 Phenologies was termed by 
   Francis Galton (darwins 
   cousin) where he ran into the 
   problem termed Toblers 1st 
   law.
o The issue of non- 
  independence- just because 
  two groups share a trait 
  doesn’t mean it is an evolved 
  adaptations (i.e., could be a 
  shared traits from a common 
  ancestor rather than an 
  adaption).
o Autocorrelation: similarity 
  between observations as a 
  function of the time lag 
  between them.
 We can study 
  autocorrelations using 
  phenology trees.
 Phylogenetic trees are a 
  useful way of tracing 
  evolutionary adaptations and 
  relationships. This allows us 
  to explore whether two or 
  more species that share traits 
  fo because they share the 
  same evolutionary history.
 Is it a shared trait due to a 
  shared evolutionary history or 
  is it a shared adaptation?
 Help with the debate on if we 
  evolved from apes why are 
  there still apes (myth)
o This assumes that all 
   members of a group evolve 
   simaltaneously. 
o Placing apes and humans on 
   a phenolgy tree helps 
   address this myth.
o Homosapien-homoerectus 
   line is a distinct branchs on 
   the tree that share a common 
   anxcestor at the root of the 
   tree (hominin ancestor). 
   Humans did not evlove out of 
  chimpanzees.
 They are not limited on 
   biological relationships and 
   can be applied to culture, 
  language, religion.
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13
Q

parts of a phylogenetic tree

A
o Branches are straight lines 
   that describe the 
   relationships between two 
   different groups or entities.
o Branches extend from 
   nodes or branch points that 
   represent groups.
o Taxons/leafs are nodes that 
   only have one connections 
   (tips of a tree) these 
   describe a singular 
   grouping.
o Clades are a grouping of 
   leafs which only have one 
   common ancestor.
o A & B are in the same clade 
  and share a common 
  ancestor but C & D are in a 
  different clade.
o A & E share a distant 
  common ancestor three 
  generations back.
o The Root is the furtherst 
   back shared ancestor for all 
   groups (clades or leafs).
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14
Q

phylogenetic trees

A
 Visually depict how species 
  on the tree are related to one 
  another.
 One branch represents a 
   single species. When two 
   branches (species) connect 
   this means they share a 
   common ancestor. Fork/Split 
   point depicts the moment 
   where a common ancestor 
   species sepearated into two 
   distinctive species. This 
   process is called speciation. 
   Overtime, you get more 
   splits, speciation and 
  biodiversity. A heirarchal 
  arrangement to see which 
  other species a group is 
  closeley related to. Not a 
  literal timeline. Tips earlier, 
  base of tree is older. The 
  more closley related two 
  groups are the more traits 
  they share and the closer the 
  branches are on the tree. 
  Connection further back in 
  the tree between two gorups 
  the fewer common traits they 
  share.
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