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Gene-Environment Interaction
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About the lecture
In this lecture, we think about a specific example of human behaviour, social anxiety, and look at how we might explain it with nature- and nurture-based influences, focusing in particular on: (i) defining social anxiety and differentiating between a clinical diagnosis of social anxiety and feeling anxious in social situations; (ii) the first of the three explanations as nativist (nature-focussed), proposing that one might inherit a genetic vulnerability to psychological distress (psychopathology); (iii) the potential outcome of this being a clinical diagnosis of social anxiety in the face of a specific negative life event; (iv) some research which has indicated that the maintenance of behavioural inhibition present in young children is a predictor of social anxiety in later life; (v) the stability of this trait throughout life, which means it can be helpful in evaluating the relative contributions of nature and nurture to developing social anxiety; (vi) the second, nurture-based explanation, citing that many sufferers of social anxiety report intrusive, negative mental images of them performing badly in a social situation, often as exaggerated versions of real events; (vii) the fact that social anxiety prevalence has been found to be more common in individualistic than in collectivist cultures, attributed to success being centred around the individual rather than the group; (viii) the third explanation as being centred around differing parenting styles, describing how this has been evidenced as a contributor to social anxiety prevalence; (ix) examples of passive and active correlations between behavioural inhibition, parenting style and social anxiety; (x) the conclusion that the nature-nurture debate will never see completion, because human traits will always be formulated by a combination of both factors.
About the lecturer
Dr Lydia Kearney is Deputy School Director of Education in the School of Psychology at the University of Kent. Dr Kearney’s research areas of interest are social anxiety and experiences of mental imagery, particularly how the two interact and impact attention and interpretation biases. Some of Dr Kearney’s recent publications include 'Observer perspective imagery in social anxiety: effects on negative thoughts and discomfort' (2011) and 'The intra and interpersonal effects of observer and field perspective imagery in social anxiety' (2013).
Cite this Lecture
APA style
Kearney, L. (2022, January 04). Genetic Regulation and Gene Expression - Gene-Environment Interaction [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/options/genetic-regulation-and-gene-expression?auth=0&lesson=4326&option=7965&type=lesson
MLA style
Kearney, L. "Genetic Regulation and Gene Expression – Gene-Environment Interaction." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 04 Jan 2022, https://massolit.io/options/genetic-regulation-and-gene-expression?auth=0&lesson=4326&option=7965&type=lesson