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Sternberg, Robert J. – Roeper Review, 2008
In this article, I consider three general issues raised by Haier and Jung (2008). First, I discuss the use of drugs for intellectual enhancement. Second, I reflect on prediction of performance based on biological measures. Third, I query whether biology can tell us what intelligence and creativity are. I conclude that biological assessments raise…
Descriptors: Drug Therapy, Intelligence, Intellectual Development, Creativity
Mercadillo, Roberto E.; Arias, Nallely A. – International Social Science Journal, 2010
This article considers the social problem of violence and the alternative of resolution through cooperation and compassion from the perspective of cognitive neuroscience. Violence is a social problem, the manifestations of which have a biological basis reflected in the development of aggression and the neural mechanisms that regulate it.…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Violence, Conflict Resolution, Cooperation

Dell, Paul F. – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 1985
Offers a study guide for translating the work of Gregory Bateson and Humberto R. Maturana. Demonstrates that their work is highly compatible. Highlights their essential message: social systems and all human endeavor must be understood in light of our existence as biological entities. (BH)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Epistemology, Family Counseling, Social Sciences

Geschwind, Norman – Annals of Dyslexia, 1982
The author reviews the theories of S. Orton relating neurological factors to dyslexia. He further considers possible advantages of a predisposition to dyslexia, including the possession of talents. He answers four common critiques of Orton's biological approach to dyslexia, and suggests instead, the advantages of such an approach. (CL)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Dyslexia, Neurological Organization, Talent

Beck, Henry – Behavioral Science, 1979
The author traces the origin of his thinking on a biobehavioral systems approach to human sociobiology and argues that it is a fruitful alternative to sociobiological models derived from population biology and genetics. Available from Behavioral Science, Systems Science Publications, University of Louisville, Louisvilly, KY 40208; sc $3.75.…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Biological Influences, Models, Social Behavior

Wilson, Frank R. – NAMTA Journal, 2000
Discusses cognitive scientists' and psycholinguists' theories of the origins of consciousness and linguistic expression. Suggests that the hand is key in the development of human intelligence and in the origin of language. Maintains that the mutual influence of hand and brain reveals the subtleties of cause and effect, stories, and the…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Brain, Evolution, Intelligence

Brown, Gerald L.; Goodwin, Frederick K – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 1986
The central nervous system transmitter serontonin may be altered in aggressive/impulsive and suicidal behaviors in humans. These reports are largely consistent with animal data, and constitute one of the most highly replicated set of findings in biological psychiatry. Suggests that some suicidal behavior may be a special kind of aggressive…
Descriptors: Aggression, Biological Influences, Correlation, Environmental Influences

Scarr, Sandra; McCartney, Kathleen – Child Development, 1983
Proposes a theory of development in which experience is directed by genotypes and in which genotypic differences affect phenotypic differences, both directly and through experience, via three kinds of genotype-environment effects. The theory adapts the three kinds of genotype-environment correlations in a developmental model used to explain…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Children, Experience, Genetics
Sanua, Victor D. – 1981
The author reviews theories and research on the etiology of infantile autism, specifically regarding its organic basis. He cites controversies over its organic vs. environmental basis and over the family's impact on autism. Quotes from such theoriests as L. Kanner, B. Bettleheim, and B. Rimland are presented along with E. R. Ritvo and M. Coleman.…
Descriptors: Autism, Biological Influences, Etiology, Parent Influence

Bickhard, Mark H. – Human Development, 1979
An argument is presented showing that the postulation of psychological capabilities that are jointly necessary to and specific to other capabilities involves strong theoretical commitments that have not generally been recognized. Examples are drawn from language development and evolution. (SS)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Developmental Psychology, Evolution, Language Acquisition

Busch, John A. – Behavioral Science, 1979
Concludes that sociobiology is of some use in explaining microlevel (social) psychological phenomena (although social variables must always be considered at the same time) but is of negligible importance in explaining macrolevel phenomena. Available from Behavioral Science, Systems Science Publications, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Cultural Influences, Neurological Organization, Social Behavior

Turkheimer, Eric – Psychological Review, 1998
Explores the role of biological causation in the development of behavioral outcomes. Genes and other biological structures constitute complex behavior, but the behavior of complex organisms cannot be derived from the biogenetic units of which it is composed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Biological Influences, Genetics, Heredity
Hazler, Richard J.; Carney, JoLynn V.; Granger, Douglas A. – Journal of Counseling & Development, 2006
The emergence of minimally intrusive techniques for collecting biological data creates a case for the inclusion of these data into bullying research models. This integration would produce a more comprehensive understanding of the problems and better direct intervention and prevention techniques, which are currently based primarily on self-report,…
Descriptors: Bullying, Integration Studies, Intervention, Prevention

Rivage-Seul, M. – Journal of Humanistic Education and Development, 1989
Asks reader to look beyond Seville Statement, Social Darwinism, and utopian ideals and come to understand ethical imagination more fully as it relates to peace studies. Examines Seville Statement and its opposition to Social Darwinism. Explains how ethical imagination serves to provide radical alternative to biological determinism. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Cognitive Development, Ethics, Human Relations

Moll, Ian – Human Development, 1994
Examines Vygotsky's notion of two main lines of psychosocial development--the natural and the cultural--in light of contemporary Marxist debates concerning the relationship between the "material" and the "social." Argues that an adequate account of Vygotsky's theory must ground the social construction of cognition in a…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Cognitive Development, Cultural Influences, Marxian Analysis