Human behaviour Flashcards

1
Q

what characteristics make homo sapiens different to other animals?

A

widest geographical range

anatomy:

  • largest relative brain size
  • unique obligatory bipedal locomotion
  • loss of body hair

behaviour:

  • very social
  • continuous (non-seasonal) sexual activity
  • many different mating systems
  • v sophisticated verbal + non-verbal communication
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2
Q

who was Wilson and what did he do?

A

1st biologist that tried to unite animal behaviour and ecology with human social sciences

used evolutionary principles

took a reductionist
standpoint

called this new science Sociobiology

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3
Q

what were Wilson’s thoughts on nature vs nurture?

A

denied the concept of ‘tabula rasa’ (clean slate)
i.e. that individuals are born with no innate mental concept
.:. he denied nurture over nature

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4
Q

why did Wilson’s experiment spark a vehement debate?

A

right and left wing are offended

re-ignited the nature vs nurture debate

accused of racism, sexual discrimination and eugenics

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5
Q

describe the example of of foraging in Ache nomadic foragers

A

live in groups 3-160 people

men hunt

women + children collect fruits, plants insects

diet:
56% meat (high calorie)
26% plants + insects
18% honey

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6
Q

what was the prediction for whether or not optimal foraging theory can be used to predict food choice?

A

unprofitable food (prey) i.e. with low calorific return per hour, should be ignored

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7
Q

what happened when guns were given to the Ache foragers in the 1980s?

A

increased food return rate of hunters from 910 cal/hr with bow and arrow, to 2360 cal/hr with guns

hunters spend less time than bow hunters pursuing difficult prey
-> they were no longer profitable

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8
Q

give an example of evolution related to behaviour in humans

i.e. on Bajau people

A

dive for food and profit
- culture is built on water but not all dive

their spleens are all larger than those in the land dwelling population
- due to mutation PDE10A

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9
Q

how is the reproductive physiology of sexes different?

what else may be different between sexes?

A

females
- make large initial parental investment
(large ovum, long gestation and lactation)

males
- make small initial parental investment

reproductive capacity
= max no. of offspring in a lifetime

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10
Q

what is the reproductive success of each sex limited by?

what does sexual conflict have implications for?

A

females
= quality of partners

males
= no. of partners

mate choice
mating tactics
sperm competition

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11
Q

describe human mate choice

A

all human societies have strong ideas about the attributes of potential breeding partners

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12
Q

what are the predictions for human mate choice based on evolutionary theory?

A

males should be interested in mating with young, fertile females that can produce many offspring

females should seek wealthy males that can provide resources for offspring

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13
Q

do humans have mating signals?

A

even though ovulation is concealed in humans

females can still ‘advertise’ their fertile period
- facial attraction for males is higher in ovulating females

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14
Q

give an experiment where females displayed mating signals

A

lap-dancers earned more money per shift when they were in their fertile period

naturally-cycling lap-dancers earned more than pill users

so there must be some cue to advertise their fertile period

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15
Q

describe parental care in Hadza hunter-gatherers

A

males spent more time with their children, if fewer single females were in the camp

-> trade-off between parental care and new matings

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16
Q

why is the evolutionary approach to human behaviour powerful?

A

it replaces several currencies by 1
= potential reproductive success

it allows researches to develop models and test these models quantitatively

17
Q

what are the difficulties with evolutionary human behaviour?

A

it is difficult or illegal to carry out experiments on humans

(e. g. manipulate reproductive success)
- > so studies are observational or correlative
- > results are often open to alternative explanations

evolutionary approach does not imply that all behaviours are adaptive

18
Q

give examples to explain why ‘evolutionary approach does not imply that all behaviours are adaptive ‘

A

evolutionary lag due to lack of adaptation to artificial environment
- e.g. eating lots of fat in the past may have been adaptive in past, but not anymore

pleiotropy
- i.e. beneficial genes may have -ve side effects

evolutionary dynamics are driven by fluctuating landscapes