Emerging Biosocial Perspectives
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Transcript Emerging Biosocial Perspectives
Emerging Biosocial Perspectives
Troost, K. M., & Filsinger, E. (1993).
Emerging biosocial perspectives in the family.
In P. G. Boss, W. J. Doherty, R. LaRossa, W. R.
Schumm, & S. K. Steinmetz (Eds.), Sourcebook
of family theories and methods: A contextual
approach (pp. 677-710) New York: Plenum
Press.
Introduction
Biosocial Domain: the connection
between the biological and the social as
independent causal agents, and
as intertwined elements of human evolution
and proximate life.
Role of the Family:
Evolutionary or Historical Relevance (a/k/a
ultimate cause): sexual and cooperative bond
results in continuation of society.
Proximate Cause:
families mediate the interplay of biological
and social factors;
biological and social factors contribute to
family phenomena.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Core Assumptions
Humans have an evolutionary origin.
The family has played an important role
in human evolution. Van de Berghe
(1988) suggests that sociality can be
reduced to three principles:
Nepotism: organisms invest in their own kin.
Reciprocity: exchange of favors.
Coercion: the act of being forced to act against
one’s interests.
The evolutionary origin of humans has an
influence upon families today.
Proximate biology has an influence on
the family, and the family has an
influence on primate biology and the
health of its members.
Genetic factors (e.g., predisposition to
disease) influence family life.
Families influence the health of members
because they are health care providers.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Core Assumptions
(cont.)
Biosocial influences are both biological
and social in character.
The biosocial domain is concerned with
three factors: the biological, biosocial,
and social.
Human biological and biosocial variables
do not determine human conduct but pose
limitations and constraints as well as
possibilities and opportunities for families.
A biosocial approach takes an intermediate
position between those who emphasize the
similarity between humans and other
animals and those who emphasize the
differences.
Humans are animals with an evolutionary
origin.
Humans have a species history which
distinguishes it from other animals: the
coevolution of biology and culture makes
humans more complex than other animals.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Core Assumptions
(cont.)
Adaptation is assumed to have taken
place over a vast period of time.
Adaptations in physiology or conduct vary
by environment.
Extant features of human biology can be
used to reveal aspects of our adaptation
in the past (see Troost, 1988a, Turke,
1988).
Proximate, distal, and ultimate levels of
interpretation can be approached
separately; ideally they will be integrated.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Myths About Humans and the
Biosocial
Humans are unique.
Although humans posses some unique traits,
so do other species.
Other species, for example,
use tools,
culturally transmit learned adaptations,
communicate,
demonstrate consciousness and thought.
Biology mandates uniformity.
Biological analyses are inherently only about
individuals, not relationships. Evolutionary
selection, for example, influences
reproduction,
food gathering,
social facilitation,
competetion management,
division of labor,
cultural transmission,
socialization,
and interpersonal communication.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Model of the Human in the Family
Context
Introduction
There is a complex interplay between
proximate (immediate) and ultimate
(evolutionary) influences.
Ontogeny, an individual’s life course
development, “is influenced by the interplay of
biological makeup and social environment” (p.
685).
Biological blueprints limit environmental
input.
Environmental constraints limit biological
predispositions.
Organisms, influenced by biological
predispositions, actively select environments.
This is known as niche building (Scarr &
Mcartney, 1983).
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Model of the Human in the Family
Context (cont.)
Extending the Model:
Life span development influences adaptability.
Departure from “normal” developmental
patterns can cause system breakdown (e.g.,
excessively early or late marriage and
childbearing have long-term implications).
Causation:
Proximate causation: immediate influences.
Distal causation: intermediate causes (e.g.,
affect of parent-infant bonding/attachment on
later development).
Ultimate causation: evolutionary influences.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Causation
Ultimate Causation:
Fundamental question: How has the family
contributed to the success of humans?
What was the character of our evolutionary
past? . . . How has our evolutionary history
affected the attributes of the family?
What principles of sociobiology apply to
humans?
Cultural diversity issues: Where and under
what ecological circumstances does the
biosocial . . . encourage variety in kinship
formation?
Why is the family a universal phenomenon?
Proximate Causation:
Fundamental question: How do biology and
society interact to form the biosocial family of
today?
What are specific biosocial covariates; what
are self-selection or niche-building effects?
What influences flexibility? What influences
rigidity?
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Main Problems Addressed by the
Theory
Reproduction and Fertility
What are the mechanisms directly affecting
reproduction?
What are some of the reproductive questions
facing humans?
Parental Investment
What are the mechanisms that support
parental investment and how are they likely to
be interpreted?
Who will do the investment and will it be
through care, food, defense, or some other
means?
Why is there such a heavy burden on parents;
would it not make them and their offspring
vulnerable?
How does the family today foster selection and
reproduction of its members?
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Main Problems Addressed by the
Theory (cont.)
Adult and Co-parental Bond
What are the mechanisms that promote adult,
co-parental bonds and marriage?
How do these bonds differ and is this
difference supported biosocially?
Do married individuals of childbearing age
who have infertile partners suffer lower marital
quality and higher marital dissolution rates?
Does marital stability vary after menopause
independently of children?
What accounts for initial and enduring
attraction and what is the role of the biosocial
in comparison to psychological or social-only
effects?
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Main Problems Addressed by the
Theory (cont.):
Sexuality
What are the mechanisms regulating
sexuality?
How is sexuality linked to reproduction, adult
bonding, and parental investment?
How are fidelity, parental certainty, and the
kinship system related to parental investment?
How do male and female sexuality mesh?
Are human beings more sex driven than
reproductively driven; is this age dependent?
What role is played by the human capacity for
trust and deception?
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Main Problems (cont.):
Family Life Course Timing: Windows and
Breakdowns
What are the biosocial pathways over the
individual life course and at what points are
they particularly subject to breakdown; what
mechanisms support these pathways and
timing periods?
What are the time periods in individual
development when a person is vulnerable to
particular negative events?
Are there windows of opportunity during which
a person is unusually sensitive to a positive
influence [e.g., imprinting]?
If a person wants to be a grandparent, when
should they begin “attraction, bonding, sexual
activity, and childbearing?
Is miscarriage influenced by family life course,
relational context, and availability of
resources?
How does individual development fit together
with family development?
How are individual and family development
influenced by parent-child bonding, parental
investment, reproduction, and sexuality?
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Examples of Research
Family Medicine
Biopsychosocial model: illnesses are
influenced by several interacting systems.
Family members tend to share risk factors,
influenced by both environmental and genetic
factors.
Stress has a negative impact on health; family
dynamics influence stress.
Four perspectives on families and illness
(based on Steinglass & Horn, 1988):
The family can be a resource that provides
social support and acts as a buffer.
The family can be a deficit, inducing illness.
The family can affect the course of the
illness and influence recurrences.
The illness can have a major impact on the
family.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Examples of Research (cont.)
Family Violence:
Spousal abuse:
Men are more likely to try to control their
partner because paternity is more difficult
to ascertain.
This controlling behavior is associated with
violence.
Abuse is also associated with investment:
women who were trying to end
relationships were at greater risk for abuse.
Child abuse:
Conflict is highest when parental
investment is low.
Risk factors: infancy, paternal uncertainty,
stepparenting, scarce resources (Daly &
Wilson, 1987, 1988a,b).
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Research and Theories on Interaction
between Biology and Society
Odor Communication
Kin recognition and attachment
Infants respond differently to their mother’s
odors than to odors from other mothers.
This has evolutionary utility.
Reaction to odors affects caregiving.
Mate selection and sexual attraction: odors
influence attraction.
Physiological Indications of Family
Phenomena
Marital satisfaction: physiological indicators
can predict current and future marital
satisfaction (Gottman, 1983; Levenson &
Gottman, 1985).
Adolescent sexuality: androgen levels are
associated with masturbation and sexual
motivation in adolescent boys.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Research and Theories on Interaction
between Biology and Society (cont.)
Physiological Indications of Family
Phenomena (cont.)
Sexual differentiation:
Gender differentiation of the brain and
nervous system appears to reflect some
physical brain structure differences.
Gender differentiation is linked to gender
differences in
cognitive style,
brain lateralization,
spatial ability.
Aggression in men is associated with
testosterone.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson
Limitations of the Theory
Overstatement of biological forces.
“Scientific” studies of “natural” differences
have been used to exploit or oppress
(e.g., The Bell Curve).
Biological explanations are reductionistic.
Dr. Ronald J. Werner-Wilson