Nature Nurture
Nature Nurture
Nature Nurture
Nature: This refers to all those characteristics and abilities that are determined by your genes. This is not the same as the characteristics you are born with, because these may have been determined by
your pre-natal environment. In addition, some genetic characteristics only appear later in development as a result of the process of maturation. Supporters of the nature view have been called natavists.
Nurture: This refers to the influences of experience, i.e., what is learned through interacting with both the physical and social environment. Supports of the nurture view are empiricists holding the view that
all knowledge is gained through experience. You may be familiar with the term empirical support, where data is collected through sensory experiences rather than a reliance on thoughts and ideas.
It has been notes that neither nature or nurture can on their own provide complete explanations. All characteristics are a product of nature and nurture. Hebb used the analogy of the length and width of a
rectangle neither can be said to contribute more to the area of the rectangle, they are both important.
E.g., Bowlby suggested that attachment behaviours are displayed because they ensure that survival of an infant and the perpetuation of the parents
genes. This survival value is further increased because attachment has implications for later relationship formation which will ultimately promote
successful reproduction.
Evolutionary psychologists assume that behaviour is a product of natural selection in the environment of evolutionary adaptation (EEA). Interpersonal
attraction can, for example, be explained as a consequence of sexual selection. Men and women select partners who enhance their productive success,
judging this in terms of traits that advertise reproductive fitness, such as signs as healthiness (white teeth) or resources. Physiological psychology is also
based on the assumption that behaviour can be explained in terms of genetically programmed systems.
Genetic theory of gender identity/role
This theory suggests that gender identity/role is not learnt, but inherited through genes from our parents. Evidence has been provided by the Reimer twin
study. Both babies were born genetically male, with an XY sex chromosome, however after a surgical accident one of the boys was then raised as a girl.
Although all efforts were made by Money, a leading gender psychologist at the time, the experiment failed and the boy rejected his socialised female
identity. This clearly shows that genetic factors play an important role in gender identity/role development.
Behaviourist accounts are all in terms of learning, but even learning itself
has a genetic basis. For example, research has found that mutant flies
missing a crucial gene can not be conditioned (Quinn et al., 1979).
Furthermore, it can be argues that Skinners concept of reinforcement
depends on an instinctive propensity to be reinforced by the pleasure
resulting from having a drive met.
Another assumption of the nurture approach is that there is the double bind hypothesis which explains schizophrenia. They suggest that schizophrenia
develops because children receive contradictory messages from their parents.
Discuss the nature-nurture debate with reference to two or more psychological theories and/or studies (30 marks) 2a) Explain what is meant by the terms nature and nurture (5 marks) 2b) With reference to two or more psychological theories, discuss
assumptions made about nature and nurture (25 marks) 3. We are essentially a product of our genetic heritage, yet the environment plays an important role in determining how this heritage is manifested. With reference to the issues in the quotation above,
discuss the nature-nurture debate in psychology (30 marks) 4. Discuss different views regarding the relationship between nature and nurture (30 marks)
LT4: Nature-V-Nurture
Research into Nature & Nurture
Perception:
The extreme natavist view holds that we are born with certain perceptual abilities which develop through a genetically
programmed process of maturation and which owe nothing to learning. Empiricists on the other hand, believe that we are
born with only the most basic sensory capacity and that our perceptual abilities develop through experience and interaction
with our environment. It is unlikely that our acquisition of perceptual skills can be fully explained by either one of these
extreme views. It seems more likely that perceptual skills develop as a result of an interaction between innate and
environmental factors. The two main theories of perception Gibsons direct theory and Gregorys Constructivist theory.
Gibson argued that perception is entirely innate because the sensory array is sufficiently rich in information for perception to
take place without any additional cognitive input. Gregory pointed to the ambiguous and fragmentary nature of most sensory
input, which must thus rely in expectations (derived from experience) to complete the perceptual process.
Gibsons theory cannot explain perceptual set because our tendency to distort ambiguous images
relies on expectations (top-down processing). Gregorys view has been criticised because it is based on
studies of visual illusions, which are ambiguous and unrepresentative of all sensory data. There are
several ways to resolve this apparent debate. One is to consider research on visual pathways suggests
that visual data takes two routes through the brain after leaving the eye. One is the dorsal system, which
is related to bottom-up, data driven processing; the other is the ventral system, related to top-down,
experience driven perception. A second way to resolve this relies on research into visual deprivation by
Blakemore and Cooper (1970) who found that kittens deprived of horizontal or vertical visual experience
for five months could no longer see lines of that particular orientation nurture (experience) had affected
nature (the brain).
Blakemore and Cooper (1970) placed kittens in a cylinder where they could only see either vertical or horizontal lines from the
time when they could first open their eyes. The kittens wore a cuff around their neck so they were not exposed to lines of any
other orientation. After 5 months, they were allowed to see the real world, although they were blind to objects whose
orientation was perpendicular to the ones they were exposed to. This can be explained because there are several types of
cell in the visual cortex which appear to respond to lines and edges of particular orientations. When the kittens visual cortex
was examined, it was found that the cells that usually respond to horizontal were absent in the vertically-lined rear kittens.
Therefore, the biological system (visual cortex) has been altered through experience.
Blakemore and Coopers work illustrates neural plasticity the ability of the nervous system to adapt
to the environment. Such plasticity, combined with neural spcialisation makes evolutionary sense. It is
advantages for an animals brain at birth to have certain hard-wired capacities, such as the ability to
respond to lines of certain orientations. At the same time, it is advantageous for the brain to adapt to
environmental conditions and specialise in the directions required by the environment so that the
nervous system can be used efficiently.
Intelligence:
Until the middle of the 20th century, intelligence was widely regarded as mainly biologically determined. The amount of
intelligence possessed by an individual was present at birth and would remain the same throughout life, regardless of
experience of training (nature).
One study (Plomin) looked at the DNA of 50 US children with IQs of 160+, and compared it with the DNA of children with
average IQs. It was found that the gene IGF2R on chromosome 6 was twice as common in the children with high IQs than in
the others. This suggests that genes are a major influence on IQ. However, in the 1950s there was a shift from the nature to
the nurture side of the argument. Supporters of this view put forward arguments that intelligence was not genetically
determined, but was due to the nature of an individuals experience. It was argued that intelligence was malleable in early
childhood. This lead to programmes in the USA called Head Start.
Cognitive Development:
Piagets theory of cognitive development is of interest in connection with the nature-nurture debate. In essence, he accepted
that nature and nurture are both important. Piaget assumed that nature played a significant point in understanding why all
children pass through the same stages of cognitive development in the same sequence. According to his theory, innate,
maturational changes within the brain account for the sequences of stages. Piaget claimed that children in every culture show
the same general pattern of cognitive development, and he attributed that to innate factors. The speed with which children
proceed through the various stages depends on environmental factors. In the environment (e.g., school) facilitates learning,
the childrens cognitive development will benefit. Second, if there is a mismatch between a current experience and the childs
stored knowledge in the forrn of schemas, this creates a state of disequilibrium or lack of balance. This is an uncomfortable
state that motivates the child to acquire new knowledge in order to return to a state of equilibrium. Third, the notion of
maturation providing the impetus for children to proceed from one stage of cognitive development to the next implies that most
children are definitely in a given stage. Piaget accepted to some extent that childrens specific learning experiences might
influence how well they performed certain tasks. E.g., the children of Mexican potters seemed to be at a more advanced
stage of cognitive development when tasks involved a ball of clay rather than beakers (Price-Williams et al., 1969).
The conclusion is that it is not possible to make a simple statement about the influence of genetic or
environmental factors, because each assumes a different importance in difference conditions.
Turkheimer (2003) found that in poor children the contribution of genetic factors to their IQ was very low
(heritability of 0.10), whereas the contribution of genetic factors to the IQs of wealthy children was very
high (0.72).
A weakness of the genetic argument and research is that it is reductionist. This is because by
emphasising the importance of genetic factors in IQ, it tends to neglect the influence of cultural factors
such as housing and poverty. If IQ was completely genetic, the correlation for MZ twins would always be
1, which it is not. This suggests that the genetic argument is an oversimplification.
One strength comes in supporting research of deprived children. One study (Perry Pre-school
Project) studied 123 poor African American children. At aged 3-4, the pps were divided into two groups
half received a weekly half day session of enrichment and active learning, plus a home visit. The other
half got nothing. At age 5 the mean IQ of the experimental group was 95, whereas the control groups IQ
was 83. This suggests that cultural and environmental factors are involved in IQ.
Manipulation of variables: There is no agreement about how we might define or measure the
environment in which a person grows up. There are no standard units of environment by which we might
compare one environment against another. At best, the efforts to manipulate environmental variables
focus on gross dimensions; at worst, the efforts to define and manipulate the environment are laden with
value judgements about good and bad environments that have minimal empirical support (Horowitz,
1993).
One weakness is Piagets theory is reductionist. This is because he saw the development of thinking as
based on innate and maturation factors. This means he neglected the importance of the social and
cultural context in which children grow up. For example, he ignored the impact of teachers, parents and
peers on a childs thinking. This suggests his view is oversimplified.
Discuss the nature-nurture debate with reference to two or more psychological theories and/or studies (30 marks) 2a) Explain what is meant by the terms nature and nurture (5 marks) 2b) With reference to two or more psychological theories, discuss
assumptions made about nature and nurture (25 marks) 3. We are essentially a product of our genetic heritage, yet the environment plays an important role in determining how this heritage is manifested. With reference to the issues in the quotation above,
discuss the nature-nurture debate in psychology (30 marks) 4. Discuss different views regarding the relationship between nature and nurture (30 marks)
LT4: Nature-V-Nurture
The RELATIONSHIP between Nature and Nurture
Strengths and
Weaknesses
It has been claimed that the environment and heredity do not act independently of one another, but interact. The ways in which this interaction may occur is:
Discuss the nature-nurture debate with reference to two or more psychological theories and/or studies (30 marks) 2a) Explain what is meant by the terms nature and nurture (5 marks) 2b) With reference to two or more psychological theories, discuss
assumptions made about nature and nurture (25 marks) 3. We are essentially a product of our genetic heritage, yet the environment plays an important role in determining how this heritage is manifested. With reference to the issues in the quotation above,
discuss the nature-nurture debate in psychology (30 marks) 4. Discuss different views regarding the relationship between nature and nurture (30 marks)