Genetic & Environmental Foundations Flashcards

1
Q

Directly observable characteristics of a person:

A

phenotypes

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2
Q

The complex blend of genetic information that determines our species and influences all our unique characteristics:

A

genotype

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3
Q

Rodlike structures which store and transmit genetic information:

A

chromosomes

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4
Q

How many chromosomes do humans have?

A

23 matching pairs

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5
Q

Chromosomes are made up of a chemical substance called?

A

DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)

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6
Q

A segment of DNA along the lengths of the chromosome:

A

gene

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7
Q

A unique feature of DNA is that it can duplicate itself through a process called?

A

mitosis

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8
Q

Another word for sex cells? (ovum and sperm)

A

gametes

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9
Q

How many chromosomes does a gamete contain?

A

23

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10
Q

Gametes are formed through a cell division process called?

A

meiosis

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11
Q

When sperm and ovum unite at conception, the resulting cell is called a?

A

zygote

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12
Q

22 of the 23 pairs of chromosomes are matching pairs called?

A

autosomes

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13
Q

The twenty-third pair of a chromosome is the ?

A

sex chromosome

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14
Q

Most chromosomal abnormalities result from errors during?

A

meiosis

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15
Q

What is the most common chromosomal abnormality?

A

down syndrome

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16
Q

A field of study that examines the contributions of nature and nurture to diversity of nature and nurture to diversity in human traits and abilities:

A

behavioural genetics

17
Q

How can researchers compute heritability estimates?

A

kinship studies

18
Q

What is the gene-environment interaction?

A

because of their genetic makeup, individuals differ in their responsiveness to qualities of the environment.

19
Q

The tendency of heredity to restrict the development of some characteristics to just one or a few outcomes:

A

canalization

20
Q

The tendency to actively choose environments that compliment our heredity:

A

nice picking

21
Q

development resulting from ongoing, bidirectional exchanges between heredity and all levels of the environment:

A

epigenesis

22
Q

heredity supplies each individual’s :

A

genotype

23
Q

heredity & the environment combine to create:

A

phenotype

24
Q

each form of a gene:

A

allele

25
Q

when the alleles of from both parents are aline, and the child displays the inherited trait?

A

homozygous

26
Q

when the alleles differ, the relationship between the alleles determine the trait that will appear?

A

heterozygous

27
Q

When heterozygous individuals with just one recessive allele can pass that trait on to their children?

A

carriers

28
Q

A sudden change in a segment of DNA:

A

mutation

29
Q

traits in which many genes influence the characteristics in question:

A

polygenic inheritance

30
Q

A pattern of inheritance in which both alleles are expressed, resulting in a combined trait, on done that is intermediate between the two:

A

incomplete dominance

31
Q

When in many heterozygous pairings, only one allele affects the child’s characteristics. It is called dominant, the second allele, which has no effect, is called recessive:

A

dominant-recessive inheritance

32
Q

when a harmful allele is carried on the X chromosome:

A

linked inheritance

33
Q

What are the three types of gene-environment correlation?

A

passive correlation, evocative and active correlation