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Neurological
Basis of Behavior (PSY -
610)
VU
Lesson
05
EVOLUTIONARY
AND GENETIC BASIS OF BEHAVIOUR
Objective:
To
understand
·
The
Brain behavior relationships from the perspectives of biological
systems.
·
The
concepts of theory of evolution and its developmental
process.
·
Evolution of the
homosapien and to understand brain development and behavior
changes.
·
Where
is the genetic programming of behavior ( if any) and what are the similarities
and
differences
between species, progenies of higher order animals, including
homosapien?
Evolutionary
and genetic basis of
Behavior
These
lectures would take the students
through Evolution of the brain,
evolution of mammalian
species,
the
evolution of man, links with
brain development. Classification on the
phylogenetic scale,
similarities
across
the phylo-genetic scale, development of
the concept of evolution, the Lamarkian,
and Darwinian
theories,
concepts of natural selection, survival
of the fittest, speciation and
adaptation, how gene
transmission
take place, the double helix Watson and
Crick model of the components of
genetic material
and
process of transmission.
Also
the nature nurture debate with
Ethologist and Sociobiolgists (based on
Darwinian evolution) and
Experimentalists.
Man:
defined in biological terms
as
Homosapien is a
comparatively newly evolved
species, with a
biological
presence of not more than
50,000 years.
There
are several distinctive characteristics
of the homosapien:
a)
The only animal with an
upright walk and true
bipedalism. This is an extremely
complex
development,
as it needs changes in the pelvic
bones, the vertebral column, the
cranium placement on
the
top of vertebral column, the
visual system etc. man
can cover long distances
without losing
stamina
or
strength to hunt.
b)
Language as an "integrated system",. It is more
learned, more refined communications
where
combination
of sounds and intonations
are used in a sophisticated system. All
cultures and tribes have
their
own language. Humans have a specialized cortical
area for language.
c)
Specialized hunter-gatherer roles
differentiating according to biological
functions for male-females.
The
females have greater responsibility of
looking after the offspring and
stay with the young
while
males
foraged.
d)
Domestication of other animal's
specialized abilities to benefit his
survival (camels, horses,
cows,
dogs,
chickens).
e)
Highly evolved and complex
societies.
f)
Kills own species without
biological benefit, warfare and
murder in other animal's
species specific
survival
purpose.
g)
Highly evolved abstract
thinking, aesthetics, tools
painting in primitive caves.
However, homo
sapien
is similar to other biological
species as can be seen
through the taxonomic
classification.
18
Neurological
Basis of Behavior (PSY -
610)
VU
Taxonomic
Classification:
All
animals in the animal kingdom categorized
into this classification,
which categorize animals from
general
to specific. For example for
homosapien we can see how
this classification
works
·
Kingdom---Animalia:
most general, all animals on the face of
the earth
·
Phylum:
Chordata (notochord, pharyngeal gill
slits )
·
Subphylum:
Vertebrata ( vertebrate
column)
·
Class:
Mammalia
·
Carnivorous,
herbivorous, omnivorous
·
Order:
Primate
·
Family:
Hominids, (for
humans)
·
Genus:
Homo
·
Species
: Sapien
Species:
Basic
to classifying animals, usually clear and
apparent difference between
species.
Phyletic
scale: a scale
ordered in terms of differential
characteristics
Species
specific: Differences
in appearance, shape and
form- horse donkey, zebra
come from the same
family
EQUUS but different species.
All three are herbivorous with
similarities in behavior
and
appearance
yet there are differences. A
horse may kick like a
donkey, but is more
territorial.
Class:
vertebrates
that bear their young and
suckle them (humans belong to this
category).
Order:
What
they forage/ hunt
flesh/vegetable eating.
Species
don't Inter breed (not in the
naturally occurring circumstance),
not because they are
incapable
of
doing so but for reasons
unknown (answer lie sin
genetic fitness). Cross mating is
not biologically
beneficial
as the genes are not propagated
any further. Biologically,
this is not a fit response.
The case
of
cross breeding of Horse and ass
equals mule (sterile), fit
for human as beast of burden
but not for
wither
species as this would be the
end of the genes of the horse, the
ass and the mule
Evolution
of Evolutionary theories
Linneas:
believed
that animals were created as one
act of creation, and that
species fixed and
unchanging,
variation within species possible
however each species
independent in its
creation.
Comte
Georges Du Buffon 1707-1788.
Degeneration one species become
another- concept of
change?
Degeneration
of monkey into man- effect of
environment, forces of migration,
environmental variation,
and
struggle for existence introduced
concepts used by Darwin
later
Lamark
1744-1829
wrote the book Philosophie
zoologique presenting
his views. The concept
of
Transmutation
given by him was that
animals are in a constant state of
flux, constantly being
perfected
and
the direction of change is towards higher
forms; Lamarkian change
gives a ladder of life
where
animals
move upwards to higher forms and dead
material returns to regenerate.
Change
not fixity of species was elaborated for the first time and that the
environmental pressures bring
about
small heritable changes. Organs grow and shrink from use. Concept of use and
disuse was also
given
by him
Lysenko:
gave his theory of inheritance of acquired characteristics, where he proposed
that if there were
some
changes made in one generation they would be passed on to next
generation.
19
Neurological
Basis of Behavior (PSY -
610)
VU
Darwin:
1809-1882: traveled to the Galapagos Island on the HMS Beagle. His nine famous
voyages
over
22 years were actually very well documented evidence of the animal species he
saw on those
islands.
His meticulous observations and notes, led him to see some patterns in
similarities and
differences
in the appearances, behavior and other patterns wrote the book "Origin of
species" on the
basis
of the documentation. The conclusions drawn are:
a.
There is diversity and variation in the genetic composition of a population and
this provides
the
rough shape that natural selection works on.
b.
Organisms vary (could be due to mutations or other mechanism of genetic
variability) and
this
variation is then inherited.
c.
Natural over productive tendencies, but natural tendency to maintain a constant
population
Reference
Pinel,
John P.J. (2003) Biopsychology
(5th edition) Allyn and Bacon
Singapore
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