biological Flashcards

1
Q

Genetics

A

DNA strands that produce instructions for physical features such as eye colour or brain structure and neurotransmitter levels
- May impact psychological features eg intelligence and mental disorder
- Genes are transmitted from parents to offspring

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2
Q

Twin studies

A

Karl Christiansen - over 3500 twins in Denmark
Concordance rates for offending behaviour - 35% MZ, 13% DZ
Included all twins born between 1880 and 1910 - not just behaviour that might be inherited but the underlying predisposing traits

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3
Q

Adoption studies

A

Raymond Crowe - 50% risk of criminal record for adopted children whose biological mothers had criminal record (only 5% when mothers had no record)

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4
Q

Candidate genes

A

Genetic analysis of almost 800 Finnish offenders - Tiihonen et al
MAOA gene regulates serotonin - aggression
CDH13 - substance abuse and ADHD
5-10% of all severe violent crime in Finland attributable to one of two genotypes

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5
Q

Diathesis-stress model

A

Offending behaviour is due to a combination of inherited factors and environmental influences
Genetic predisposition and biological or psychological trigger

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6
Q

EVAL - issues with twin evidence

A

P - limitation as twin studies assume equal environments
E - researchers studying twins environmental factors are held constant as twins grew up together
E - ‘shared environment assumption’ apply more to MZ than DZ as MZ look identical so people treat them more similarly
L - higher concordance rates for MZs in twin studies may simply be because they are treated more similarly than DZ

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7
Q

EVAL - support for diathesis-stress

A

P - strength as research support
E - study of 13,000 danish adoptees by Mednick et al
E - neither the biological nor adoptive parents had convictions, the percentage of adoptees that did was 13.5%. Figure rose 20% when either of biological parents had convictions and 24.5% when both adoptive and biological parents had convictions
L - genetic inheritance plays an important role in offending but environmental influence is important - support for diathesis-stress model of crime

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8
Q

EVAL - nature and nurture

A

P - nature and nurture - adoptive studies eg Mednick et al good way of separating nature and nurture
E - if crime has a genetic component - adopted child should still experience the influence of biological parent despite not living with them
E - many adoptions take place when children are older, so they spend several years with their biological parents - adoptees encouraged to maintain contact with biological family so biological parents exert an environmental influence

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9
Q

Neural explanation

A

Neural differences in brains of offenders and non-offenders
Research focus on antisocial personality disorder - reduced emotions, lack of empathy ect

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10
Q

Prefrontal cortex

A

Raine et al - people with APD (lack of empathy) have reduced activity in the prefrontal cortex
Found 11% reduction in the volume of grey matter in the prefrontal cortex of people with APD compared to controls

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11
Q

Mirror neurons

A

Keysers - people with ADP showed empathy (controlled by mirror neurons) but only when asked to - neural switch on and off

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12
Q

EVAL - brain evidence

A

P - strength as support for link between crime and frontal lobe
E - Kandel and Freed - reviewed evidence of frontal lobe damage and antisocial behaviour
E - People with such damage show impulsive behaviour, emotional instability and an inability to learn from their mistakes - frontal lobe is associated with planning behaviour
L - supports the idea that brain damage may be a causal factor in offending behaviour

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13
Q

EVAL - intervening variables

A

P - limitation is link between neural differences and APD may be complex
E - other factors may contribute to ADP - Farrington et al - studied a group of men who scored highly on psychopathy
E - These individuals had experienced various risk factors during childhood - raised by convicted parent and being neglected - early childhood experiences and neural differences associated with it such as reduced activity in frontal lobe due to trauma
L - Suggests that relationship between neural differences, APD and offending is complex and there may be other intervening variables that have an impact

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14
Q

EVAL - biological determinism

A

P - biological approach suggests that offending behaviour is determined by genetic / neural factors
E - cannot be controlled by the person - person should not be held responsible for a crime
E - however - our justice system is based on the notion that we all have responsibility for our actions
L - identifications of possible biological precursors to crime complicates this principle

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