schizophrenia - biological explanations

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AS - Level psychology (A2 chapter 8 - Schizophrenia ) Flashcards on schizophrenia - biological explanations , created by Daisy U on 05/01/2017.
Daisy  U
Flashcards by Daisy U, updated more than 1 year ago
Daisy  U
Created by Daisy U over 7 years ago
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Question Answer
what do you call genes that are linked to disease candidate genes
who came up with the genetic basis for schz Gottesman genetic basis
the closer you are related.... the more at risk you are of getting schz
identical twins share what % of genes and what % risk os schz 100 48
non identical twins share what % of genes and what % risk os schz 50 17
siblings share what % of genes and what % risk os schz 50 9
grand children share what % of genes and what % risk os schz 25 5
general population share what % of genes and what % risk os schz N/A 1
candidate genes are polygenic they affect neurotransmitters
who did the study for candidate genes Riphe
how many patients and controls did Riphe have for the candidate genes study patients - 37,000 controls - 113,000
how many separate genes did Riphe find are liked to schz 108
what is the dopamine hypothesis made up of neurotransmitters hyperdopaminergia in sub cortex in the cortex
what are neurotransmitters chemical messengers
how is dopamine linked to schz it is a neurotransmitter that has an excitatory effect - high levels associated with schz
what is the hyperdopaminergia in the sub cortex looks at roles of high levels of dopamine e.g. too much in Broca's area is linked with speech poverty
in the cortex low levels of dopamine linked to negative symptoms
what are neural correlates measures of structure and function of the brain
who looked at neural correlates in negative symptoms Juckel
abnormality where causes avolition (negative symptom) ventral striatum low activity
who looked at neural correlates in positive symptoms Allen
abnormality where causes positive symptoms superior temporal low activity
evaluation biological explanations - evidence for genetic susceptibility for and against Gottesman risk of schz increases when closely related Tienari adoption still has high rates of schz if parents have it
evaluation biological explanations - mixed evidence dopamine hypothesis dopamine agonists (e.g. amphetamines) increase dopamine so more likely to get schz dopamine antipsychotics decrease dopamine so reduces schz Riphe - other neurotransmitters also effect (glutamate)
evaluation biological explanations - what about cause and effect cause and effect does affect all of the studies (which one first)
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