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Nature loves nurture. (Revolutionary Studies in Child Psychology).


In the spring of 2002, Psychologist Wallace Dixon published the results of a survey of 1,500 randomly selected, doctoral-level members of the Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD SRCD Society for Research in Child Development
SRCD Siskiyou Resource Conservation District (Northern California) 
). He had asked the society members which studies, published since 1950, they considered "most revolutionary."

* In this series, psychologist Christopher Thurber -- an ACA ACA - Application Control Architecture  member as well as a member of SRCD -- shares a summary of the top twenty most revolutionary studies. Thurber has grouped these twenty studies into six topics: (1) nature and nurture; (2) attachment and temperament; (3) language; (4) cognitive development; (5) parenting and socialization socialization /so·cial·iza·tion/ (so?shal-i-za´shun) the process by which society integrates the individual and the individual learns to behave in socially acceptable ways.

so·cial·i·za·tion
n.
; and (6) risk and resilience.

* Each of the six articles, to be published consecutively for the 2003 volume of Camping Magazine, will present a digest of several studies, reflections on what made the research revolutionary, and ideas about how the findings apply to today's campers and camp professionals.

Big Questions

Few questions in science or the humanities have engaged and frustrated scholars more than "Why are people the way they are?" We wonder: Were we born that way? Were we injured by someone or something? Is it cultural? Did our parents raise us that way?

The three studies reviewed in this article were revolutionary in the way they advanced our thinking about hereditary influences and environmental influences on development. Or, as many of us heard the issue labeled in school -- Nature Versus Nurture The nature versus nurture debates concern the relative importance of an individual's innate qualities ("nature", i.e. nativism, or philosophical empiricism, innatism) versus personal experiences ("nurture") in determining or causing individual differences in physical and behavioral .

No Winner

In the Nature Versus Nurture debate, there is, of course, no winner. Therefore, framing the question as one factor versus the other is misguided. For any given human trait or behavior, heredity heredity, transmission from generation to generation through the process of reproduction in plants and animals of factors which cause the offspring to resemble their parents. That like begets like has been a maxim since ancient times.  and environment do not compete to see which will win, or which factor will emerge as the singular reason why someone is the way they are. Instead, heredity and environment interact.

For decades now, psychologists and geneticists This is a list of people who have made notable contributions to genetics. The growth and development of genetics represents the work of many people. This list of geneticists is therefore by no means complete. Contributors of great distinction to genetics are not yet on the list.  alike have thought of heredity and environment as interactive -- hence, the title of this article. Nature and nurture work together -- each influencing the other at different times -- to shape the way people are. Prior to the 1950s, however, most people did think in terms of Nature Versus Nurture. Psychologist Anne Anastasi helped change that.

What's Revolutionary?

In her 1957 presidential address to the American Psychological Association's Division of General Psychology, Anastasi challenged her colleagues to think in a new way: "Psychologists began by asking which type of factor, hereditary or environmental, is responsible for individual differences in a given trait. Later, they tried to discover how much of the variance was attributable to heredity and how much to the environment ... a more fruitful approach is to be found in the question 'How?'"

In 1957, this was a revolutionary way of thinking. Subsequent studies, with humans and other animals, sought to answer Anastasi's challenge. Sometimes, the results were surprising.

How Do Heredity and Environment Interact?

Two other studies on the "Top 20" list offer intriguing answers to the manner in which heredity and environment interact. Research suggested that some abilities, such as facial recognition Noun 1. facial recognition - biometric identification by scanning a person's face and matching it against a library of known faces; "they used face recognition to spot known terrorists"
automatic face recognition, face recognition
 and the perception of movement, were innate. Soon after birth, maturation and learning help these abilities develop.

In 1961, developmental psychologist Robert Fantz published a summary of his research on infant form perception. At the time Fantz published this work, the scientific community agreed that very young human infants could see light, color, and movement. Fantz and his colleagues set out to learn whether newborns had an innate ability to perceive certain forms, such as faces. He and his colleagues had already shown that newborn chicks had a preference for objects shaped like seeds. (Fantz had measured the pecking frequency of newly hatched chicks who were given objects of all different shapes.)

With human newborns, Fantz measured how long they gazed at two-dimensional versus three-dimensional circles, high-contrast versus low-contrast designs, and organized drawings of faces versus scrambled patterns of similar shapes. Interestingly, newborns gazed longer at three-dimensional objects, high-contrast designs, and faces.

Fantz deduced that human babies are hard-wired to recognize visual stimuli that are important for survival and later development. But Fantz also cited studies that showed how visual perception was impaired when animals were deprived of certain visual stimuli for some period after birth.

Thus, his conclusion was: "... there appears to be a complex interplay of innate ability, maturation, and learning in the molding of visual behavior, operating in this manner: there is a critical age for the development of a given visual response when the visual, mental, and motor capacities are ready to be used and under normal circumstances would be used together. At that time, the animal will either show the response without experience or will learn it rapidly."

To understand Fantz's conclusion, think about this: there are some human traits that have a well understood hereditary cause. For example, the presence of an extra twenty-third chromosome causes Down's syndrome. Other conditions, such as infant lead poisoning lead poisoning or plumbism (plŭm`bĭz'əm), intoxication of the system by organic compounds containing lead. , are purely environmental. Both conditions result in cognitive deficits, but the causes are completely different. Fantz's research was revolutionary in its suggestion that hereditary visual abilities exist at birth, but that babies need exposure to complex visual stimuli in order for these abilities to mature and develop fully Perhaps the same would turn out to be true for other traits.

Neural Architecture

In 1965, Harvard neurophysiologists David Hubel Noun 1. David Hubel - United States neuroscientist noted for his studies of the neural basis of vision (born in 1926)
Hubel
 and Torsten Wiesel Torsten Nils Wiesel (b. June 3, 1924) was a Swedish co-recipient with David H. Hubel of the 1981 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, for their discoveries concerning information processing in the visual system; the prize was shared with Roger W.  took Fantz's research a step further. They wanted to know exactly which neurons Neurons
Nerve cells in the brain, brain stem, and spinal cord that connect the nervous system and the muscles.

Mentioned in: Speech Disorders
 in the visual cortex visual cortex
n.
The region of the cerebral cortex occupying the entire surface of the occipital lobe and receiving the visual data from the lateral geniculate body of the thalamus. Also called visual area.
 were responsible for our innate perceptual abilities. Of course, sticking probes in infants' brains and conducting post-mortem exams was ethically impossible. So, Hubel and Wiesel used very young kittens. (This may also seem unethical unethical

said of conduct not conforming with professional ethics.
, but the findings have guided our treatment of numerous visually impaired humans.)

Hubel and Wiesel measured the electrical impulses of individual brain neurons when kittens were exposed to moving patterns on a screen located about five feet from the kittens' faces. Their revolutionary finding was that kittens had specific neurons that were activated by specific patterns. For example, one set of neurons was activated by a line on the screen that moved up and down; another set of neurons was activated by a line that moved left and right. The "hard wiring" that Fantz had hypothesized could be physically located in an animal's brain!

The most extraordinary part of this research was that different kittens' neural responses were the same, regardless of whether the kittens had spent their first open-eyed days in total darkness or in light. Hubel and Wiesel concluded that what Fantz had called "critical periods" may not be -- at least for some innate abilities -- as sensitive to environmental stimuli as had been believed. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, the neural architecture that enables animals to do some of the things they do is there at birth and easily activated without extensive prior exposure or learning.

It Matters

This research by Fantz, Hubel, and Wiesel matters to anyone who works with children. These studies, and many subsequent studies, have helped answer Anastasi's challenging question about how heredity and environment interact (or do not interact) to shape different human traits. Knowing something about how heredity and environment have interacted over the course of a child's life to shape a certain behavior guides our approach with that child.

Take, for example, a noncompliant behavior. Imagine that you explain to your campers during orientation that they are not allowed in the water without the permission of an adult. On the second day of camp, you see a camper wading into the water and you shout, "Please come out of the water! General swim starts at 11:30. Until then, no campers are allowed in the water." But the camper fails to comply and continues wading into the water. What's going on What's Going On is a record by American soul singer Marvin Gaye. Released on May 21, 1971 (see 1971 in music), What's Going On reflected the beginning of a new trend in soul music. ? In this case, knowing something about the hereditary and environmental causes of the camper's behavior will guide your approach.

Perhaps the child was born deaf, with a congenital defect Noun 1. congenital defect - a defect that is present at birth
birth defect, congenital abnormality, congenital anomaly, congenital disorder

ablepharia - a congenital absence of eyelids (partial or complete)
 in her auditory cortex auditory cortex
n.
The region of the cerebral cortex that receives auditory data from the medial geniculate body. Also called auditory area.
. She didn't hear your explanation at orientation, and she's not hearing your shouting now. In this case, you'll have to write or use sign language. The point is that the camper's noncompliant behavior is not intentional. In other words, she is not behaving defiantly, just ignorantly. She doesn't know better, and your approach would first be to teach her the rules in a way she can understand.

Alternatively, perhaps the child hears perfectly well, but has never experienced reasonable consequences for her misbehavior. Her parents and teachers were permissive permissive adj. 1) referring to any act which is allowed by court order, legal procedure, or agreement. 2) tolerant or allowing of others' behavior, suggesting contrary to others' standards.


PERMISSIVE.
, and the camp she went to last year allowed the campers to wade into the water without adult supervision (!). Given her environmental exposure, it's logical that she hasn't heeded the rules you explained. Naturally, your approach would be different than with the deaf child. This defiant child needs a second explanation of the rule, a reasonable consequence for her misbehavior, solid examples of good behavior Orderly and lawful action; conduct that is deemed proper for a peaceful and law-abiding individual.

The definition of good behavior depends upon how the phrase is used.
 to follow, and a continuous set of boundaries that are consistently reinforced by the entire staff She will have to learn what adult authority is.

In this example of a single behavior, one begins to appreciate the importance of understanding causes for behaviors. As fate would have it "As Fate Would Have It" is an episode of the science fiction television series The 4400. Synopsis
NTAC offers Jordan Collier protection when Maia has a morbid premonition.
, though, most explanations for child behavior are not as attractively simple as our noncompliant bather. Why else might she be disobedient?

As Complex as It Gets

Despite decades of quality psychological research, complex human behaviors -- including the full range of abnormal behaviors we all see at camp -- are still a confusing tangle of hereditary and environmental factors. High-tech brain imaging techniques, such as functional magnetic resonance magnetic resonance, in physics and chemistry, phenomenon produced by simultaneously applying a steady magnetic field and electromagnetic radiation (usually radio waves) to a sample of atoms and then adjusting the frequency of the radiation and the strength of the  imagery (IMRI Imri (ĭm`rī), in the Bible.

1 Judahite. Probably the same as Amariah (8.)

2 Father of a builder of the walls.
) have helped us see the human brain in action like never before. Imagine how excited Hubel and Wiesel would have been to have this technology in the early 1960s! But just knowing the neurochemistry neurochemistry /neu·ro·chem·is·try/ (-kem´is-tre) the branch of neurology dealing with the chemistry of the nervous system.

neu·ro·chem·is·try
n.
 involved in a behavior doesn't necessarily answer Anastasi's question of how nature and nurture have interacted to cause a particular trait. With each child, we need to become a sort of "behavior detective."

For example, we know that children with true Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), formerly called hyperkinesis or minimal brain dysfunction, a chronic, neurologically based syndrome characterized by any or all of three types of behavior: hyperactivity, distractibility, and impulsivity.  (ADHD Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) Definition

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a developmental disorder characterized by distractibility, hyperactivity, impulsive behaviors, and the inability to remain focused on tasks or
) have a biological deficit (itself the result of a complex heredity-environment interaction). In these children, certain neural pathways between their brain stem brain stem, lower part of the brain, adjoining and structurally continuous with the spinal cord. The upper segment of the human brain stem, the pons, contains nerve fibers that connect the two halves of the cerebellum.  and frontal lobes don't have enough of the neurotransmitters Neurotransmitters
Chemicals within the nervous system that transmit information from or between nerve cells.

Mentioned in: Bulimia Nervosa, Impotence, Pain, Withdrawal Syndromes
 dopamine dopamine (dōp`əmēn), one of the intermediate substances in the biosynthesis of epinephrine and norepinephrine. See catecholamine.
dopamine

One of the catecholamines, widely distributed in the central nervous system.
 and norepinephrine norepinephrine (nôr'ĕpīnĕf`rən), a neurotransmitter in the catecholamine family that mediates chemical communication in the sympathetic nervous system, a branch of the autonomic nervous system. . Without enough of these important chemical messengers, these children have difficulty sustaining attention.

Of course, treating the chemical dysfunction in these children's brains with stimulant stimulant, any substance that causes an increase in activity in various parts of the nervous system or directly increases muscle activity. Cerebral, or psychic, stimulants act on the central nervous system and provide a temporary sense of alertness and well-being as  medications is tremendously helpful. But, as anyone who works with children with ADHD can tell you, both medical treatment and adjustments to the environment are necessary for maximum symptom relief. This is where the detective work comes in.

Knowing the biological facts does not explain why a particular child does not pay attention in a particular instance. To know this, we must also know the history of how that child has been treated by others, the tasks to which that child has been exposed, and the rewards that child has received for paying attention Noun 1. paying attention - paying particular notice (as to children or helpless people); "his attentiveness to her wishes"; "he spends without heed to the consequences"
attentiveness, heed, regard
 in other circumstances. Knowing all this, of course, is impossible. At best, camp staff get a tiny snapshot of a camper s history At worst, parents withhold pertinent information, and staff must rely on intuition.

Using What You Know

The three landmark studies reviewed in this article provide a scientific basis for a useful approach to managing camper behavior. First, we must "use what we know." We know that every camper was born with some hard-wired traits. We also know that in the years before they attend our camp, their hard-wired neural networks have grown, as a consequence of maturation and learning. We know that each camper was exposed to different environmental stimuli. Some of those stimuli have even promoted new neural connections and literally changed some of the hard wiring. Finally, we know that most of the behaviors, thoughts, and emotions that our campers possess reflect years of complex interactions between heredity and environment.

Knowing What to Use

We stretch our understanding of the nature/nurture question each time we sit up late on the lodge porch lamenting, "I just don't understand what drives this kid." At camp, our campers captivate and concern us, often leaving us asking, "Where did this child learn such a behavior?" Or, "What kind of parents does this child have?" Or even "How can a child be born like this?"

It's at frustrating moments such as these when we must "know what to use." Below is a list of suggestions for applying our knowledge of the heredity and environment interaction.

* Use your camp's health form to garner as much helpful information about each camper as you can. Ask not only medical history questions (which are primarily heredity-type questions) but also nurturing questions about the child's bedtime routines, previous experience away from home, exposure to violence, social skills, and self-discipline.

* In cases where a camper's behaviors, thoughts, or emotions seem mysterious or abnormal, consult the child's parents. Although biased, parents know more about their child's heredity and environment than anyone.

* In cases where a camper has received professional treatment for a physical or psychological condition, consult the child's care providers. This requires parental permission, but it can offer useful treatment strategies to continue at camp.

* Prevent your own temper from flaring in response to misbehavior by reminding yourself that what you're seeing is partly a reflection of a genetic and social history. Take heart in the opportunity you have to expose this camper to your healthy camp environment. You are adding the next chapter to that child's history.

* Never say, "We only have a few weeks with this camper. That's not enough time to promote meaningful change." Set the realistic goal of sharing your camp's way of living and caring with each child. Know that you've planted a seed that may blossom years down the road.

* Provide a loving and safe set of consequences. (Many campers may not have had such exposure.) Praise positive behaviors and redirect negative behaviors through reasoning, distraction, withdrawal of privileges, and natural consequences.

* Work hard to make your camp and your staff as nurturing as possible. Camp can be, quite literally, an environmental force in children's lives that changes forever their brain chemistry and neural pathways.

Big Answers

Each of us arrives in this world with a genetic endowment Noun 1. genetic endowment - the total of inherited attributes
heredity

property - a basic or essential attribute shared by all members of a class; "a study of the physical properties of atomic particles"
 primed for learning. Perceptual skills, such as vision, take only limited environmental exposure to be activated. More complex skills, such as language, take more time to learn, but are possible only because our brains have the necessary structures to acquire syntax without effort. And the most complicated skills, such as impulse control impulse control Psychology The degree to which a person can control the desire for immediate gratification or other; IC may be the single most important indicator of a person's future adaptation in terms of number of friends, school performance and future  or understanding our own emotions, take years of practice, loving guidance, and brain tissue maturation.

So, the next time you praise a camper or stop him from fighting or put your hand on his shoulder to comfort him or remind him to take his medication or use humor to keep his attention or smile back when he smiles at you, remember that you've just provided the next important piece of nurturing in his young life. Over time, your nurturing will influence his very nature.

Christopher A. Thurber, Ph.D., is a licensed clinical psychologist, camp consultant, and the co-author of The Summer Camp Handbook. For questions about this article or to inquire about staff training on this or other topics, send e-mail to chris@campspirit.com.

References

Anastasi A. (1958). Heredity, environment, and the question "How?" Psychological Review, 65, 197-208. (ranked 14/20)

Franz, R. L. (1961). The origin of form perception. Scientific American Scientific American

U.S. monthly magazine interpreting scientific developments to lay readers. It was founded in 1845 as a newspaper describing new inventions. By 1853 its circulation had reached 30,000 and it was reporting on various sciences, such as astronomy and
 204, 66 72. (ranked 19/20)

Hubel, D. H., & Wiesel, T. N. (1965). Receptive fields of cells in striate cortex Noun 1. striate cortex - the part of the occipital cortex that receives the fibers of the optic radiation from the lateral geniculate body and is the primary receptive area for vision
area 17 of Brodmann, Brodmann's area 17, first visual area, striate area
 of very young, visually inexperienced kittens. Journal of Neurophysiology neurophysiology /neu·ro·phys·i·ol·o·gy/ (-fiz?e-ol´ah-je) physiology of the nervous system.

neu·ro·phys·i·ol·o·gy
n.
, 26, 944-1002. (ranked 13/20)

Photos: Page 32, Girl Scout Limberlost Council, Ft. Wayne, Indiana/Bryce Hunt; page 33, Camp Aldersgate, Inc., Little Rock, Arkansas Little Rock, Arkansas

required military intervention to desegregate schools (1957–1958). [Am. Hist.: Van Doren, 556–557]

See : Bigotry
.
COPYRIGHT 2003 American Camping Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Thurber, Christopher A.
Publication:Camping Magazine
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2003
Words:2620
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