Clinical psychology dep.
Biological approach in psychology
Present by
Darya Rostem
Clinical psychologist
Biological psychology
This viewpoint emphasizes
the impact of biology on our
behavior.
Psychobiologistsstudy how
the brain, the nervous system,
and hormones and genetics
influence our behavior.
The main concern of this approach
1.The relationship between mind and body
2.The effects mind on body.
3.the influence of heredity on behavior.
How do biopsychologistsexplain human
behavior?
Genetics
Brain structure & functions
Nervous system
Genetic inheritance. It
is assumed that genes
have a major effect
on developing mental
illness.
•genetic influences in particular types of
behavior, These genes are thought to
influence the development of the
nervous system, making it vulnerable
to malfunctioning in certain ways that
produce the symptoms of the disorder.
•Kendleret al. (1985) found that
relatives of schizophrenics were 18
times more likely to develop the
illness than a matched control
group.
Brain areas
biopsychologicalexplanations often
focus on which brain areas are
responsible for which types of
thinking or behaviourand how they
connect with other functions and
brain areas.
For example;
Broca’s area, which controls the
production of speech and Wernicke’s
area, which controls the
comprehension of speech.
Bio-chemistry. Chemical imbalance in the brain
may be involved in certain mental illness.
•For example, too much
Dopamine has been detected in
the brains of Schizophrenia.
The major neurotransmitters and their
function and location
The main assumptions of biological
approach
A mental illness is similar to a physical illness, both have a physical causes.
Organic disorders
•E.g. Alzheimer disease
Functional disorders
•E.g. Depression
Infection
•Barr et al. (1990) found
increased levels of
schizophrenia amongst
mothers who had ‘flu’ during
they were pregnant.
•This suggest a possible link
between infection and
schizophrenia.
Mental illness has a physiological causes,
needs physiological treatment
1)Psychosurgery
1)ECT (Electro-Convulsive Therapy)
2)Chemotherapy (drug)
Psychosurgery
•Is an invasive medical
treatment that
involves the deliberate
destruction of tiny
amount of brain tissue
in order to treat
mental illness, such as
clinical depression.
ECT (Electro-Convulsive Therapy)
•is a procedure, done under
general anesthesia, in which
small electric currents are
passed through the brain,
intentionally triggering a brief
seizure. ECT seems to cause
changes in brain chemistry that
can quickly reverse symptoms of
certain mental illnesses.
Chemotherapy (drug)
•used to treat psychological
disorders with medications
Methodology in biological psychology
•Genetics study
1.Twins study
2.Adoption study
3.Family study
•Scans
1.FMRI
2.MRI
Methodology in biological psychology
•Case study •Post mortem study of the brain
Some of the subfield of biological psychology
Biological approaches Research proceduresused
1.Physiological psychology Direct manipulation on the nervesystem, chemical
and electrical activities of the neurons……
2. Psychopharmacology Focus on the effects of the drug onbrain activity and
behavior.
3. neuropsychology Focus on brain dysfunction and behavioral problems
caused by the Brain damage in humans.
4. Psychophysiology Examines physiologicalactivities related to
psychological processes. Such as heat rate, respiration
rate, and using EEG (brainwave activity during
thinking)
Strength point
•One strength of the biological
approach is that it is very
scientific. This is a strength
because the experiments used
are measurable, objective and
can be repeated to test for
reliability.
•This approach supported by
empirical evidence.
•One strength of the biological
approach is that the treatment
can be used directly.
Such as, depression : Prozac
Anxiety : Librium
Weakness point
•One weakness of the biological
approach is that it focuses too much
on the 'nature' side of the
nature/nurture debate. It argues that
behaviouris caused by hormones,
neurotransmitters and genetics. One
theory is that schizophrenia is genetic,
however, twin studies show that it is
not completely genetic and the
environment has a part to play.
•The therapies offered by the biological
approach can have serious side
effects. i.e. Tardive dyskinesia
•The main limitation of the biological
approach is that it may be useful in
dealing with the symptoms of mental
illness but it may not be effective in
resolving the underlying causes.