Psychology and Evolution: The Origins of MindPsychology and Evolution: The Origins of Mind introduces students to the emerging field of evolutionary psychology. Bruce Bridgeman applies concepts of evolutionary theory to basic psychological functions to derive new insights into the roots of human behavior and how that behavior may be viewed as adaptation to life's significant challenges. Examining courtship, reproduction, child rearing, family relations, social interaction, and language development, Bridgeman uses evolutionary theory to help in the search to elucidate the foundations of human perceptions, experiences, and behaviors. |
Contents
The Evolution Revolution | 1 |
Children and ChildRearing | 118 |
Family and Society | 149 |
Copyright | |
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ability activity adapted addictive altruism animals aphasia areas attractive base pairs behavior brain Broca's Broca's area cheap trick child chimpanzee cognitive communication consciousness cortex Creole Creole languages culture Darwin disease dominance dopamine drugs effective environment evidence evolution evolutionary psychology evolutionary theory evolved example experience female fertility Figure frontal function genes genetic grammar hominid Homo erectus Homo habilis homosexuals individuals infants language learning less logical male mate mechanisms memory mental million modern humans monkeys mother motivation natural selection Neanderthals neurological neurotransmitters normal objects organism Paleolithic parents partner patient pattern perception person phobias phoneme population preference pregnancy primates problem punctuated equilibrium reciprocal altruism relationship relatives Reprinted with permission reproductive result Robert Trivers savanna schizophrenia Science sensory sexual social interactions societies species speech SSSM stimulation strategies structure symptoms tion traits variability visual system Wernicke's aphasia women words



