{"id":1612,"date":"2024-01-19T10:02:02","date_gmt":"2024-01-19T18:02:02","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/?p=1612"},"modified":"2024-01-19T10:02:02","modified_gmt":"2024-01-19T18:02:02","slug":"highlights-and-notes-on-behave-the-biology-of-humans-at-our-best-and-worst-by-sapolsky-robert-m","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/2024\/01\/19\/highlights-and-notes-on-behave-the-biology-of-humans-at-our-best-and-worst-by-sapolsky-robert-m\/","title":{"rendered":"Highlights and Notes on Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Sapolsky, Robert M."},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"notebookFor\">Notebook Export<\/div>\n<div class=\"bookTitle\">Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst<\/div>\n<div class=\"authors\">Sapolsky, Robert M.<\/div>\n<div class=\"citation\">Citation (Chicago Style): Sapolsky, Robert M.. <i>Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst<\/i>. Penguin Publishing Group, 2017. Kindle edition.<\/div>\n<hr \/>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">One: THE BEHAVIOR<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 19 \u00b7 Location 442<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">the most context-savvy part of the brain, the prefrontal cortex.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Two: ONE SECOND BEFORE<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 25 \u00b7 Location 514<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 26 \u00b7 Location 533<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">to first-year medical students, the SNS mediates the \u201cfour Fs\u2014fear, fight, flight, and sex.\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 36 \u00b7 Location 696<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">The fuzzy distinction between innate and learned fear maps nicely onto the amygdala\u2019s structure.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 36 \u00b7 Location 697<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">basolateral amygdala (BLA),<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 36 \u00b7 Location 698<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">the BLA that learns fear and then sends the news to the central amygdala.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 41 \u00b7 Location 773<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">\u201cperiaqueductal gray\u201d (PAG);<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 43 \u00b7 Location 807<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 43 \u00b7 Location 811<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">locus coeruleus,<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 44 \u00b7 Location 821<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">But autonomic feedback influences the intensity of what is felt.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 45 \u00b7 Location 843<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">the frontal cortex makes you do the harder thing when it\u2019s the right thing to do.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 45 \u00b7 Location 851<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">it\u2019s not fully online until people are in their midtwenties. You\u2019d better bet this factoid will be relevant to the chapter about adolescence.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 46 \u00b7 Location 858<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">von Economo neurons (aka spindle neurons).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 46 \u00b7 Location 866<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">prefrontal cortex (PFC),<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 49 \u00b7 Location 910<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Just think how around age three, our frontal cortices learned a rule followed for the rest of our lives\u2014don\u2019t pee whenever you feel like it\u2014and gained the means to enact that rule by increasing their influence over neurons regulating the bladder.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 50 \u00b7 Location 931<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">And then one day you realize that you\u2019re five measures past the trill, it went fine, and you didn\u2019t have to think about it. And that\u2019s when doing the trill is transferred from the frontal cortex to more reflexive brain regions (e.g., the cerebellum).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 50 \u00b7 Location 937<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Often the neurobiology of automaticity mediates doing the hardest moral acts, while the neurobiology of the frontal cortex mediates working hard on a term paper about the subject.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 53 \u00b7 Location 973<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">His remaining right frontal cortical tissue had taken on some of the functions lost in the injury. Such malleability of the brain is the focus of chapter<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 54 \u00b7 Location 989<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 54 \u00b7 Location 989<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">And there\u2019s another nonpathological circumstance where the PFC silences, producing emotional tsunamis: during orgasm.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 59 \u00b7 Location 1077<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">show him a picture of someone of another race for only a tenth of a second. This is too fast for him to be aware of what he saw. But thanks to that anatomical shortcut, the amygdala knows . . . and activates. In contrast, show the picture for a longer time. Again the amygdala activates, but then the cognitive dlPFC does as well,<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 59 \u00b7 Location 1085<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">is increasingly activated; the person feels increasingly distressed. What neurological disease is involved? None. This is a typical teenager.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 61 \u00b7 Location 1107<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Antecedent reappraisal is why placebos work.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 61 \u00b7 Location 1112<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)\u2014for the treatment of disorders of emotion regulation.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 64 \u00b7 Location 1166<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Dopamine is synthesized in multiple brain regions. One such region helps initiate movement; damage there produces Parkinson\u2019s disease. Another regulates the release of a pituitary hormone. But the dopaminergic system that concerns us arises from an ancient, evolutionarily conserved region near the brain stem called the ventral tegmental area (henceforth the \u201ctegmentum\u201d).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 64 \u00b7 Location 1169<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">brain region to be introduced in this chapter, the nucleus accumbens (henceforth the \u201caccumbens\u201d).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 65 \u00b7 Location 1185<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">anhedonia,\u201d the inability to feel pleasure.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 66 \u00b7 Location 1192<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">The mesolimbic dopamine system also responds to pleasurable aesthetics.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 66 \u00b7 Location 1205<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Punishing norm violations is satisfying.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 67 \u00b7 Location 1215<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Thus there\u2019s dopaminergic activation during schadenfreude\u2014gloating over an envied person\u2019s fall from grace.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 68 \u00b7 Location 1225<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">In order to accommodate the pleasures of both mathematics and orgasms, the system must constantly rescale to accommodate the range of intensity offered by particular stimuli. The response to any reward must habituate with repetition, so that the system can respond over its full range to the next new thing.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 68 \u00b7 Location 1233<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">following a reward, the dopamine system codes for discrepancy from expectation\u2014get what you expected, and there\u2019s a steady-state dribble of dopamine. Get more reward and\/ or get it sooner than expected, and there\u2019s a big burst; less and\/ or later, a decrease. Some tegmental neurons respond to positive discrepancy from expectation, others to negative; appropriately,<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 69 \u00b7 Location 1251<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Once, we had lives that, amid considerable privation, also offered numerous subtle, hard-won pleasures. And now we have drugs that cause spasms of pleasure and dopamine release a thousandfold higher than anything stimulated in our old drug-free world.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 70 \u00b7 Location 1260<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">What was an unexpected pleasure yesterday is what we feel entitled to today, and what won\u2019t be enough tomorrow.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 70 \u00b7 Location 1261<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Thus, dopamine is about invidious, rapidly habituating reward. But dopamine is more interesting than that.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 74 \u00b7 Location 1325<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Dopamine is not just about reward anticipation; it fuels the goal-directed behavior needed to gain that reward; dopamine \u201cbinds\u201d the value of a reward to the resulting work. It\u2019s about the motivation arising from those dopaminergic projections to the PFC that is needed to do the harder thing (i.e., to work).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 74 \u00b7 Location 1327<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">In other words, dopamine is not about the happiness of reward. It\u2019s about the happiness of pursuit of reward that has a decent chance of occurring.*<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 75 \u00b7 Location 1344<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Dopamine and the frontal cortex are in the thick of this phenomenon. Discounting curves\u2014a value of \u00bc Z instead of \u00bd Z\u2014are coded in the accumbens, while dlPFC and vmPFC neurons code for time delay. 102<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 75 \u00b7 Location 1350<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Collectively these studies show that our dopaminergic system, frontal cortex, amygdala, insula, and other members of the chorus code for differing aspects of reward magnitude, delay, and probability with varying degrees of accuracy, all influencing whether we manage to do the harder, more correct thing. 104<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 76 \u00b7 Location 1359<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">No gerbil works hard at school to get good SAT scores to get into a good college to get into a good grad school to get a good job to get into a good nursing home.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 77 \u00b7 Location 1377<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Importantly, while increasing serotonin signaling did not lessen impulsiveness in normal subjects, it did in subjects prone toward impulsivity, such as adolescents with conduct disorder. How does serotonin do this? Nearly all serotonin is synthesized in one brain region,*<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 77 \u00b7 Location 1387<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">was organized around three themes: the hub of fear, aggression, and arousal centered in the amygdala; the hub of reward, anticipation, and motivation of the dopaminergic system; and the hub of frontal cortical regulation and restraint of behavior.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 78 \u00b7 Location 1404<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">good neuropsychologist can discern more of what\u2019s happening to someone with subtle but pervasive memory problems than can a gazillion-dollar brain scanner.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 79 \u00b7 Location 1413<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">mainly because I think that a term like \u201cforgiveness,\u201d and others related to criminal justice (e.g., \u201cevil,\u201d \u201csoul,\u201d \u201cvolition,\u201d and \u201cblame\u201d), are incompatible with science and should be discarded.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 79 \u00b7 Location 1423<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Consider, for example, the fusiform face area.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 80 \u00b7 Location 1428<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">it\u2019s about recognizing examples of things from categories that are emotionally salient to each individual.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Three: SECONDS TO MINUTES BEFORE<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 81 \u00b7 Location 1444<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">field of ethology, the science of interviewing an animal in its own language.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 83 \u00b7 Location 1463<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">(\u201c Studying rat social behavior in a cage is like studying dolphin swimming behavior in a bathtub\u201d is an ethology adage).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 84 \u00b7 Location 1479<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">3<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 85 \u00b7 Location 1510<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">amygdala. It\u2019s the frontal cortex exerting executive control over the deeper, darker amygdaloid response.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 86 \u00b7 Location 1513<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">prosopagnosia),<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 86 \u00b7 Location 1517<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Remarkably, if mixed-race subjects are told they\u2019ve been assigned to one of the two races for the study, they show less fusiform response to faces of the arbitrarily designated \u201cother\u201d race. 12<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 87 \u00b7 Location 1542<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">This is so depressing\u2014are we hardwired to fear the face of someone of another race, to process their face less as a face, to feel less empathy? No. For starters, there\u2019s tremendous individual variation\u2014not everyone\u2019s amygdala activates in response to an other-race face, and those exceptions are informative.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 88 \u00b7 Location 1560<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">18<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 89 \u00b7 Location 1579<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">amygdala activation increases if loud rap music\u2014a genre typically associated more with African Americans than with whites\u2014plays in the background. The opposite occurs when evoking negative white stereotypes with death metal music blaring.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 90 \u00b7 Location 1601<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">our brains constantly receive \u201cinteroceptive\u201d information about the body\u2019s internal state.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 91 \u00b7 Location 1616<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">As a repeating theme, pain does not cause aggression; it amplifies preexisting tendencies toward aggression. In other words, pain makes aggressive people more aggressive, while doing the opposite to unaggressive individuals.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 95 \u00b7 Location 1684<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">\u201cMale generosity as a mating signal.\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Four: HOURS TO DAYS BEFORE<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 99 \u00b7 Location 1735<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 99 \u00b7 Location 1744<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">And testosterone is everyone\u2019s usual suspect when it comes to the hormonal causes of aggression.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 100 \u00b7 Location 1759<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Thus, some male aggression is testosterone independent.*<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 102 \u00b7 Location 1795<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">the stria terminalis (the way station through which the amygdala communicates with the rest of the brain),<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 103 \u00b7 Location 1800<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Testosterone makes people cocky, egocentric, and narcissistic. 6<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 103 \u00b7 Location 1810<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Dopamine is needed for place-preference conditioning to occur, and testosterone increases activity in the ventral tegmentum, the source of those mesolimbic and mesocortical dopamine projections.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 104 \u00b7 Location 1826<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Testosterone did not create new social patterns of aggression; it exaggerated preexisting ones.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 107 \u00b7 Location 1878<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Testosterone makes us more willing to do what it takes to attain and maintain status. And the key point is what it takes. Engineer social circumstances right, and boosting testosterone levels during a challenge would make people compete like crazy to do the most acts of random kindness. In our world riddled with male violence, the problem isn\u2019t that testosterone can increase levels of aggression. The problem is the frequency with which we reward aggression.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 108 \u00b7 Location 1888<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Oxytocin and vasopressin are chemically similar hormones;<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 108 \u00b7 Location 1897<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Things became interesting with the discovery that those hypothalamic neurons that made oxytocin and vasopressin also sent projections throughout the brain, including the dopamine-related ventral tegmentum and nucleus accumbens, hippocampus, amygdala, and frontal cortex,<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 108 \u00b7 Location 1902<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">neuropeptides;<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 109 \u00b7 Location 1912<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Spray oxytocin up a woman\u2019s nose (a way to get the neuropeptide past the blood-brain barrier and into the brain), and she\u2019ll find babies to look more appealing. Moreover, women<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 112 \u00b7 Location 1962<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">So a hormone that evolved for mother-infant bonding plays a role in this bizarre, unprecedented form of bonding between species.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 113 \u00b7 Location 1973<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">stated caustically, oxytocin makes people irrational dupes; stated more angelically, oxytocin makes people turn the other cheek.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 113 \u00b7 Location 1987<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 114 \u00b7 Location 2002<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">autism spectrum disorders (ASD) (strikingly, people with ASD show blunted fusiform responses to<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 116 \u00b7 Location 2043<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">As emphasized by De Dreu, perhaps oxytocin evolved to enhance social competence to make us better at identifying who is an Us.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 117 \u00b7 Location 2051<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Oxytocin, the luv hormone, makes us more prosocial to Us and worse to everyone else. That\u2019s not generic prosociality. That\u2019s ethnocentrism and xenophobia.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 122 \u00b7 Location 2134<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Is PMS\/ PMDD a biological disease or a social construct?<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 122 \u00b7 Location 2139<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">This view even had room for a socioeconomic critique, with howlers like \u201cPMS [is] a mode for the expression of women\u2019s anger resulting from her oppressed position in American capitalist society.\u201d* 62<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 123 \u00b7 Location 2151<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">predominate in different populations.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 130 \u00b7 Location 2258<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Thus stress facilitates learning fear associations but impairs learning fear extinction.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 131 \u00b7 Location 2279<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Stated most broadly, sustained stress impairs risk assessment. 76<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 132 \u00b7 Location 2295<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Humans excel at stress-induced displacement aggression\u2014consider how economic downturns increase rates of spousal and child abuse.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 135 \u00b7 Location 2356<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">make people more cooperative and generous. But this comes with a huge caveat\u2014these hormones increase prosociality only toward an Us. When dealing with Thems, they make us more ethnocentric and xenophobic. Oxytocin is not a universal luv hormone. It\u2019s a parochial one.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Five: DAYS TO MONTHS BEFORE<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Note &#8211; Page 139 \u00b7 Location 2408<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">https:\/\/en.m.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/N-Methyl-D-aspartic_acid<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 140 \u00b7 Location 2417<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">LTP\u2014\u201c long-term potentiation.\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 140 \u00b7 Location 2419<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">how LTP works, and the key is that when NMDA receptors finally activate and open their channels, it is calcium, rather than sodium, that flows in. This causes an array of changes; here are a few:<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 140 \u00b7 Location 2431<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">This is LTD\u2014long-term \u201cdepression\u201d\u2014experience-dependent, long-term decreases in synaptic excitability (and, interestingly, the mechanisms underlying LTD are not merely the opposite of LTP). LTD is not the functional opposite of LTP either\u2014rather than being the basis of generic forgetting, it sharpens a signal by erasing what\u2019s extraneous.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 141 \u00b7 Location 2436<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 141 \u00b7 Location 2438<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Somehow LTP-induced changes in the receptor are transferred to the next generation of copies.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 141 \u00b7 Location 2444<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 142 \u00b7 Location 2453<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Combining these effects\u2014more excitable synapses in the amygdala, fewer ones in the frontal cortex\u2014helps explain stress-induced impulsivity and poor emotional regulation.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 143 \u00b7 Location 2481<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">(the BNST\u2014bed nucleus of the stria terminalis).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 144 \u00b7 Location 2484<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">glucocorticoids because it\u2019s terrified, dendrites atrophy in the hippocampus. However, if it secretes<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 146 \u00b7 Location 2519<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 146 \u00b7 Location 2529<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">This expansion probably involved axonal sprouting and the formation of new connections.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 151 \u00b7 Location 2605<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">one renowned study showed enlargement of that part of the hippocampus in London taxi drivers.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 153 \u00b7 Location 2641<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Six: ADOLESCENCE; OR, DUDE, WHERE\u2019S MY FRONTAL CORTEX?<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 159 \u00b7 Location 2727<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Meanwhile, while adolescent males don\u2019t have equivalent hormonal gyrations, it can\u2019t help that their frontal cortex keeps getting hypoxic from the priapic blood flow to the crotch.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 161 \u00b7 Location 2775<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Novelty craving permeates adolescence; it is when we usually develop our stable tastes in music, food, and fashion, with openness to novelty declining thereafter.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 162 \u00b7 Location 2790<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Recall from chapter 2 how the ventral tegmentum is the source of the mesolimbic dopamine projection to the nucleus accumbens, and of the mesocortical dopamine projection to the frontal cortex. During adolescence, dopamine projection density and<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 163 \u00b7 Location 2806<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">And the small reward? Accumbens activity declined. In other words, adolescents experience bigger-than-expected rewards more positively than do adults and smaller-than-expected rewards as aversive.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 169 \u00b7 Location 2897<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 170 \u00b7 Location 2910<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">As has been said, the greatest crime-fighting tool is a thirtieth birthday.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 173 \u00b7 Location 2961<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Ironically, it seems that the genetic program of human brain development has evolved to, as much as possible, free the frontal cortex from genes.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Seven: BACK TO THE CRIB, BACK TO THE WOMB<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 180 \u00b7 Location 3069<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">(downside: this is also when kids first negatively stereotype categories of people).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 180 \u00b7 Location 3071<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">But before we get carried away with the generosity of youth, there is already in-group bias; if the other child is a stranger, there is less egalitarianism. 14<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 184 \u00b7 Location 3123<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Woody Guthrie wrote in \u201cPretty Boy Floyd,\u201d \u201cI love a good man outside the law, just as much as I hate a bad man inside the law.\u201d*<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 190 \u00b7 Location 3231<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">economist Steven Levitt of the University of Chicago\u2014it was the legalization of abortions. The authors\u2019 state-by-state analysis of the liberalization of abortion laws and the demographics<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 190 \u00b7 Location 3233<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">of the crime drop showed that when abortions become readily available in an area, rates of crime by young adults decline about twenty years later.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 194 \u00b7 Location 3300<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 195 \u00b7 Location 3314<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">By age five, the lower a child\u2019s socioeconomic status, on the average, the (a) higher the basal glucocorticoid levels and\/ or the more reactive the glucocorticoid stress response, (b) the thinner the frontal cortex and the lower its metabolism, and (c) the poorer the frontal function concerning working memory, emotion regulation, impulse control, and executive decision making; moreover, to achieve equivalent frontal regulation, lower-SES kids must activate more frontal cortex than do higher-SES kids. In addition, childhood poverty impairs maturation of the corpus callosum, a bundle<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 196 \u00b7 Location 3335<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">early adversity produces an adult organism more vulnerable to drug and alcohol addiction. The pathway to this vulnerability is probably threefold: (a) effects on the developing<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 197 \u00b7 Location 3340<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Chronic stress depletes the mesolimbic system of dopamine, generating anhedonia.*<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 198 \u00b7 Location 3368<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Two caveats: (a) there is no evidence that catastrophically violent individuals (e.g., mass shooters) are that way because of childhood exposure to violent media; (b) exposure does not remotely guarantee increased aggression\u2014instead, effects are strongest on kids already prone toward violence.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 200 \u00b7 Location 3397<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">What explains such resilience?<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 201 \u00b7 Location 3415<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Except for the amygdala. Which is enlarged. That pretty much says it all.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 202 \u00b7 Location 3421<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 207 \u00b7 Location 3515<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 209 \u00b7 Location 3548<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 213 \u00b7 Location 3608<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">less effective at eliciting female-typical sexual behavior (i.e., a back-arching reflex called lordosis).<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Eight: BACK TO WHEN YOU WERE JUST A FERTILIZED EGG<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 226 \u00b7 Location 3815<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">before the start of the stretch of DNA coding for that gene is a short stretch called a promoter*\u2014the \u201con\u201d switch. What turns the promoter switch on? Something called a transcription factor (TF) binds to the promoter. This causes the recruitment of enzymes that transcribe the gene into RNA.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 229 \u00b7 Location 3867<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">accumbens, that target of mesolimbic dopamine projection.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 230 \u00b7 Location 3885<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">the two separate stretches of coding DNA are called \u201cexons,\u201d separated by an \u201cintron.\u201d Many genes are broken into numerous exons (with, logically, one less intron than the number of exons). How do you produce a protein from an \u201cexonic\u201d gene?<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 232 \u00b7 Location 3920<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Even flies evolved such that their neurons are freed from the strict genetic marching orders they inherit.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 235 \u00b7 Location 3955<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 236 \u00b7 Location 3982<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">extroversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, neuroticism, and openness to experience (known as the \u201cBig Five\u201d personality traits).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 238 \u00b7 Location 4018<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">DZ twins are \u201cdichorionic,\u201d meaning that they have separate placentas. In contrast, 75 percent of MZ twins share one placenta (i.e., are \u201cmonochorionic\u201d).*<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 243 \u00b7 Location 4096<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 245 \u00b7 Location 4135<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 255 \u00b7 Location 4307<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Lots of work has examined the genes involved, most broadly showing that variants that produce lowered dopamine signaling (less dopamine in the synapse, fewer dopamine receptors, or lower responsiveness of these receptors) are associated with sensation seeking, risk taking, attentional problems, and extroversion. Such individuals have to seek experiences of greater intensity to compensate for the blunted dopamine signaling.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 256 \u00b7 Location 4328<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">after dopamine binds to receptors, it floats off and must be removed from the synapse.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 258 \u00b7 Location 4352<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">That still doesn\u2019t tell us why for some people novelty seeking means frequently switching their openings in chess games, while for others it means looking for a new locale because it\u2019s getting stale being a mercenary in the Congo. No gene or handful of genes that we are aware of will tell us much about that.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 259 \u00b7 Location 4373<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">The hormone is not a protein (none of the steroid hormones are), meaning there isn\u2019t a testosterone gene.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 264 \u00b7 Location 4468<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Even more appropriately, all behavioral traits are affected to some degree by genetic variability. 65 They have to be, given that they specify the structure of all the proteins pertinent to every neurotransmitter, hormone, receptor, etc. that there is.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Nine: CENTURIES TO MILLENNIA BEFORE<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 271 \u00b7 Location 4544<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Frans de Waal: \u201cculture\u201d is how we do and think about things, transmitted by nongenetic means.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 272 \u00b7 Location 4563<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">a school kid in Romania, Bulgaria, or Ukraine, and you\u2019re about ten times more likely to be chronically bullied than a kid in Sweden, Iceland, or Denmark (stay tuned for a closer look at this). 10<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 273 \u00b7 Location 4580<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">cultures.*<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 274 \u00b7 Location 4591<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">American individualism is about noncooperation, rather than nonconformity).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 284 \u00b7 Location 4759<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">The Southern sense of honor in place is also seen in Robert E. Lee; he opposed Southern secession, even made some ambiguous statements that could be viewed as opposed to slavery.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 285 \u00b7 Location 4771<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Sticks and stones might break your bones, but names will cause you to break the offender\u2019s bones.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 288 \u00b7 Location 4806<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">rest of the South? Disproportionately herders from Scotland, Ireland, and northern England.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 292 \u00b7 Location 4871<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Or translated from social science\u2013ese, marked inequality makes people crummier to one another.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 294 \u00b7 Location 4909<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">more unequal are incomes in a society, the more pronounced will be the disadvantages to its better-off members from public expenditure, and the more resources will those members have [available to them] to mount effective political opposition\u201d (e.g., lobbying). Evans notes how this \u201csecession of the wealthy\u201d promotes \u201cprivate affluence and public squalor.\u201d Meaning worse health for the have-nots. 39<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 295 \u00b7 Location 4927<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Turns out there\u2019s a substantial predictor of it: if the plane has a first-class section, there\u2019s almost a fourfold increase in the odds of a coach passenger having air rage. Force coach passengers to walk through first class when boarding, and you more than double the chances further.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 298 \u00b7 Location 4982<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Nevertheless, some of the highest-density places on earth\u2014Hong Kong, Singapore, and Tokyo\u2014have miniscule rates of violence. High-density living is not synonymous with aggression in rats or humans.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 302 \u00b7 Location 5044<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Over the last fifty years El Ni\u00f1os have roughly doubled the likelihood of civil conflict, mostly by stoking the fires of preexisting conflicts.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 304 \u00b7 Location 5066<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">\u201cMickey Mouse has supernatural powers, but no one worships or would fight\u2014or kill\u2014for him. Our social brains may help explain why children the world over are attracted to talking teacups, but religion is much more than<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 326 \u00b7 Location 5387<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Agriculture makes for sedentary living, leading humans to do something that no primate with a concern for hygiene and public health would ever do, namely living in close proximity to their feces.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 327 \u00b7 Location 5401<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">To hark back to a theme from the first pages of this book, it doesn\u2019t take a particularly fancy brain to learn how to motorically, say, throw a punch. But it takes a fancy, environmentally malleable frontal cortex to learn culture-specific rules about when it\u2019s okay to throw punches.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Ten: THE EVOLUTION OF BEHAVIOR<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 328 \u00b7 Location 5417<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Dobzhansky, \u201cNothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution.\u201d Including this book.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 329 \u00b7 Location 5425<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">pleiotropy,\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 329 \u00b7 Location 5426<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">example, primates\u2019 prostates have high metabolic rates, enhancing sperm motility. Upside: enhanced fertility; downside: increased risk of prostate cancer.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 340 \u00b7 Location 5621<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">major histocompatibility complex (MHC).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 345 \u00b7 Location 5695<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">In the 1940s \u201cgame theory\u201d was founded by the polymath John von Neumann, one of the fathers of computer science. Game theory is the study of strategic decision making. Framed slightly differently, it\u2019s the mathematical study of when to cooperate and when to cheat.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 352 \u00b7 Location 5810<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">there are frequently pairs where one human does all the labor, the other doing nothing other than intermittently handing him some green pieces of paper. The point is that animals have systems of reciprocity with sensitivity to cheating.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 360 \u00b7 Location 5917<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Tournament species, where males have minimal investment in a female\u2019s future reproductive success, have numerous imprinted genes, while pair-bonders don\u2019t. 42 What about humans? Stay tuned.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 361 \u00b7 Location 5941<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">more radical view, held by Dawkins, is that the most appropriate level is that of individual genes\u2014i.e., selfish genes, rather than selfish genomes.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 364 \u00b7 Location 5981<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">The economist Samuel Bowles, of the Santa Fe Institute, emphasizes how intergroup conflict like war is the driving force for intragroup cooperation (\u201c parochial altruism\u201d); he refers to intergroup conflict as \u201caltruism\u2019s midwife.\u201d 46<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 372 \u00b7 Location 6117<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">called pseudospeciation, and as will be seen in chapter 15, it underpins many of our worst moments.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 373 \u00b7 Location 6130<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">five thousand people from thirty-two hunter-gatherer societies from around the world* showed that only around 40 percent of people within bands are blood relatives. 63 In other words, hunter-gatherer cooperativeness, the social building block of 99 percent of hominin history, rests at least as much on reciprocal altruism among nonrelatives as on kin selection<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 373 \u00b7 Location 6138<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">three major criticisms of sociobiology.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 374 \u00b7 Location 6153<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">phyletic gradualism\u201d).<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 375 \u00b7 Location 6164<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Instead there were long periods of stasis, of unchanged fossils, and then, in a paleontological blink of an eye, there\u2019d be a rapid transition to a very different form. Maybe<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 377 \u00b7 Location 6192<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">As we saw in chapter 8, recent decades have provided many possible molecular mechanisms for rapid change. This is the world of macromutations: (a) traditional point, insertion, and deletion mutations in genes whose proteins have amplifying network effects (transcription factors, splicing enzymes, transposes) in an exon expressed in<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 379 \u00b7 Location 6224<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Lactase persistence evolved and spread in a fraction of a geologic blink of an eye\u2014in the last ten thousand years or so, coevolving with domestication of dairy animals.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 379 \u00b7 Location 6232<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">The first generations with Westernized diets develop catastrophically high rates of obesity, hypertension, adult-onset diabetes, and death at early ages, thanks to \u201cthrifty\u201d genotypes that are great at storing nutrients, honed by millennia of sparser diets. But within a few generations diabetes rates begin to subside, as there is an increased prevalence in the population of \u201csloppier\u201d metabolic genotypes. 70<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 380 \u00b7 Location 6243<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">And no matter how rapid the changes, there\u2019s always some degree of gradualism\u2014no female has ever given birth to a member of a new species. 72<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 381 \u00b7 Location 6267<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">\u201cspandrels\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 382 \u00b7 Location 6275<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">In that view, male nipples are spandrels\u2014they serve an adaptive role in females and came along for the ride as baggage in<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 384 \u00b7 Location 6304<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">contrast, saying, \u201cSociobiologists imply that when an unfair feature of life is the case, it is because it ought to be.\u201d And the sociobiologists responded by flipping is\/ ought around: \u201cWe agree that life ought to be fair, but nonetheless, this is reality. Saying that we advocate something just because we report it is like saying oncologists advocate cancer.\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 385 \u00b7 Location 6315<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">was a bold assertion that the heuristic of dialectical materialism not only extends beyond the economic world into the naturalistic one, but is ontologically rooted in the essential sameness of both worlds\u2019 dynamic of resolution of irresolvable contradictions.* It is Marx and Engels as trilobite and snail.*<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Eleven: US VERSUS THEM<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 387 \u00b7 Location 6342<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 388 \u00b7 Location 6357<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">discussed in chapter 3, fifty-millisecond exposure to the face of someone of another race activates the amygdala, while failing to activate the fusiform face area as much as same-race faces do\u2014all within a few hundred milliseconds.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 389 \u00b7 Location 6369<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">The brain\u2019s fault lines dividing Us from Them were shown in chapter 4\u2019 s discussion of oxytocin. Recall how the hormone prompts trust, generosity, and cooperation toward Us but crappier behavior toward Them\u2014<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 412 \u00b7 Location 6764<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 413 \u00b7 Location 6774<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Twelve: HIERARCHY, OBEDIENCE, AND RESISTANCE<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 476 \u00b7 Location 7810<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Humans committed themselves to a unique trajectory when we invented socioeconomic status. In terms of its caustic, scarring impact on minds and<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 476 \u00b7 Location 7811<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">bodies, nothing in the history of animals being crappy to one another about status differences comes within light-years of our invention of poverty.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Thirteen: MORALITY AND DOING THE RIGHT THING, ONCE YOU\u2019VE FIGURED OUT WHAT THAT IS<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 479 \u00b7 Location 7841<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 479 \u00b7 Location 7852<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">The Kohlbergian emergence of increasingly complex stages of moral development is built on the Piagetian emergence of increasingly complex logical operations. They are similar, neurobiologically.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 479 \u00b7 Location 7854<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">People with obsessive-compulsive disorder get mired in both everyday decision making and moral decision making, and their dlPFCs go wild with activity for both.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 481 \u00b7 Location 7887<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 487 \u00b7 Location 7989<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 505 \u00b7 Location 8272<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">\u201cOur moral brains evolved to help us spread our genes, not to maximize our collective happiness.\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Fourteen: FEELING SOMEONE\u2019S PAIN, UNDERSTANDING SOMEONE\u2019S PAIN, ALLEVIATING SOMEONE\u2019S PAIN<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 538 \u00b7 Location 8811<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">by Gregory Hickok of the University of California at Irvine,<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 544 \u00b7 Location 8931<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Dalai Lama, who is famously intrigued by neuroscience and who has said that if his Dalai Lama gig hadn\u2019t come up, he would have wanted to be a scientist or engineer. The most publicized work revolves around the neuroimaging of Matthieu Ricard, a French-born Buddhist monk (who is the Dalai Lama\u2019s French translator and who just happens to have a PhD in molecular biology from the Pasteur Institute\u2014this is one interesting guy). 50<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Sixteen: BIOLOGY, THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM, AND (OH, WHY NOT?) FREE WILL<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 584 \u00b7 Location 9538<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 589 \u00b7 Location 9609<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 591 \u00b7 Location 9658<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">In response to the latter idea, the pages of this book show how our social world is ultimately as much a product of our determined, materialist brains as are our simple motor movements.* 15<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 592 \u00b7 Location 9670<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Turns out that the same APA had filed a brief some years earlier in a different case, emphasizing that adolescents are sufficiently mature that they should be able to choose whether to have an abortion, even without parental consent.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 597 \u00b7 Location 9757<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 598 \u00b7 Location 9773<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">And yes, being a child molester is as much a product of biology as is being a pedophile. To think otherwise is little more than folk psychology.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 598 \u00b7 Location 9775<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 598 \u00b7 Location 9781<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">\u201cBrains don\u2019t kill people. People kill people.\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 599 \u00b7 Location 9793<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">it.\u201d 23<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 599 \u00b7 Location 9797<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">example, transcranial magnetic stimulation techniques that transiently activate or inactivate a part of the cortex can change someone\u2019s moral decision making, decisions about punishment, or levels of generosity and empathy. That\u2019s causality.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 602 \u00b7 Location 9841<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">The biology of the behaviors that interest us is, in all cases, multifactorial\u2014that is the thesis of this book.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 609 \u00b7 Location 9946<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">This is a deep, atavistic pleasure. Put people in brain scanners, give them scenarios of norm violations. Decision making about culpability for the violation correlates with activity in the cognitive dlPFC. But decision making about appropriate punishment activates the emotional vmPFC, along with the amygdala and insula; the more activation, the more punishment.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 610 \u00b7 Location 9959<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">But there is simply no place for the idea that punishment is a virtue. Our dopaminergic pathways will have to find their stimulation elsewhere.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 612 \u00b7 Location 9992<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">zygomatic arches.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Seventeen: WAR AND PEACE<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 623 \u00b7 Location 10163<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">As we saw, small-band cultures (such as hunter-gatherers) rarely invent moralizing deities. It is not until cultures are large enough that people regularly interact anonymously with strangers that it becomes commonplace to invent a judgmental god\u2014the Judeo-Christian\/ Muslim deity.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 624 \u00b7 Location 10174<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Priming people to think of God as punitive decreases cheating; thinking of God as forgiving increases it.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 624 \u00b7 Location 10181<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">\u201cpeople killing each other over who has the better imaginary friend,\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 626 \u00b7 Location 10209<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">It\u2019s not religiosity that stokes intergroup hostility; it\u2019s being surrounded by coreligionists who affirm parochial identity, commitment, and shared loves and hatreds.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 626 \u00b7 Location 10218<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">inter-group<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 627 \u00b7 Location 10220<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">intergroup<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 633 \u00b7 Location 10314<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Prisoner\u2019s Dilemma shows that whoever takes the first cooperative step becomes one step behind.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 634 \u00b7 Location 10329<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">It\u2019s open-ended play that fosters cooperation\u2014an unknown number of rounds, producing the shadow of the future, where retribution is possible and the advantages of sustained mutual<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 637 \u00b7 Location 10392<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Sometimes it takes a village to ransack a neighboring village.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 638 \u00b7 Location 10405<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">We\u2019re the only species that institutionalizes reconciliation and that grapples with \u201ctruth,\u201d \u201capology,\u201d \u201cforgiveness,\u201d \u201creparations,\u201d \u201camnesty,\u201d and \u201cforgetting.\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 639 \u00b7 Location 10424<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Thus TRCs show the differences between reconciliation and the likes of remorse and forgiveness.*<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 643 \u00b7 Location 10494<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Irrational optimism can be great; it\u2019s why only about 15 percent instead of 99 percent of humans get clinically depressed.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 644 \u00b7 Location 10508<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">\u201chumans are bad at [close-range, hand-to-hand] violence, even if civilization makes us a bit better at it.\u201d 43<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 644 \u00b7 Location 10511<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">book On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society, by David Grossman,<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 644 \u00b7 Location 10513<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Of the almost 27,000 single-load muskets recovered from the field, almost 24,000 of them were loaded and unfired; 12,000 were loaded multiple times, 6,000 loaded three to ten times. Lots of soldiers were standing there thinking, \u201cI\u2019m going to shoot soon, yes I am,<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 645 \u00b7 Location 10522<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">humans show a strong natural aversion to killing at close range. The most resistance is against hand-to-hand combat with a knife or bayonet. Next comes short-range firing with a pistol, then long-range firing, all the way to the easiest, which is bombs and artillery.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 645 \u00b7 Location 10531<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">But consider drone pilots\u2014soldiers who sit in control rooms in the United States, directing drones on the other side of the planet. They are not in danger. Yet their rates of PTSD are just as high as those of soldiers actually \u201cin\u201d war.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 646 \u00b7 Location 10542<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">It took him a long time to die. I just watched him. I watched him become the same color as the ground he was lying on.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 646 \u00b7 Location 10543<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">45<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 647 \u00b7 Location 10559<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">It\u2019s remarkable the things humans can spend their lives studying. You can be a coniologist or a caliologist, studying dust or birds\u2019 nests, respectively. There are batologists and brontologists, pondering brambles and thunder, and vexillologists and zygologists, with their dazzling knowledge of flags and of methods for fastening things. On and on\u2014odontology and odonatology, phenology and phonology, parapsychology and parasitology. A rhinologist and a nosologist fall in love and have a child who becomes a rhinological nosologist, studying the classification of nose diseases.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 648 \u00b7 Location 10577<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Like another widely dispersed primate, humans, baboons eat almost anything\u2014fruit, plants, tubers, insects, eggs, prey they\u2019ve killed, dead things they\u2019ve scavenged.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 649 \u00b7 Location 10583<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">discarded roast beef and drumsticks and plum pudding, and then waddle out for a nap. I\u2019d even darted Garbage Dump animals and studied them with colleagues\u2014they put on weight, thickened with subcutaneous fat, had elevated circulating levels of insulin and triglycerides, had the start of metabolic syndrome. 46<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 650 \u00b7 Location 10602<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">They stayed close together, sat in contact, and groomed more than average. Levels of aggression were lower, and in an informative way. Males still had a dominance hierarchy; number three would still fight with numbers four and two, defending his status and seeking a promotion. But there was minimal displacement aggression onto innocent bystanders\u2014when number three lost a fight, he\u2019d rarely terrorize number ten or a female. Stress hormone levels were low; the neurochemistry of anxiety and benzodiazepines worked differently in these individuals.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">EPILOGUE<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 672 \u00b7 Location 10912<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Adolescence shows us that the most interesting part of the brain evolved to be shaped minimally by genes and maximally by experience; that\u2019s how we learn\u2014context, context, context.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Appendix 1: Neuroscience 101<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 683 \u00b7 Location 11063<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">What I\u2019ve just outlined is that a single dendritic fibril receives an excitatory signal from the previous neuron (i.e., the previous neuron has had an action potential); this generates an action potential in that dendrite, which propagates toward the cell body, over it, on to the axon, to the axon terminals, and signals the next neuron in line. Not true. Instead: So the neuron is sitting there with nothing to say, which is to say that it\u2019s displaying a resting potential; all of its insides are negatively charged. Along comes an excitatory signal at that one dendritic fibril, emanating from the previous neuron in line. As a result, channels open and ions flow in and out of that one dendrite. But only a little bit. Not enough to make the entire inside of the neuron positively charged, simply a little less negatively charged just inside that dendrite (just to attach some numbers here that don\u2019t matter in the slightest, the resting potential charge shifts from around\u201370 millivolts<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 685 \u00b7 Location 11088<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">two different types of signaling<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 685 \u00b7 Location 11089<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">analogue<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 685 \u00b7 Location 11090<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 685 \u00b7 Location 11090<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">digital<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 686 \u00b7 Location 11111<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">The brain is wired in networks of divergent and convergent signaling.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Bookmark &#8211; Page 687 \u00b7 Location 11117<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 688 \u00b7 Location 11131<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">the axon terminals of one neuron don\u2019t actually touch the dendritic spines of the next. Instead there\u2019s a tiny gap between the two. This notion was called the \u201cneuron doctrine.\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 691 \u00b7 Location 11170<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">saw, some of the most interesting findings that help explain individual differences in the behaviors that concern us in this book relate to amounts of neurotransmitter made and released, and the amounts and functioning of the receptors, reuptake pumps, and degradative enzymes.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 691 \u00b7 Location 11181<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">inhibitory neurotransmitters.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 692 \u00b7 Location 11197<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Neurotransmitters are therefore made from precursors that are plentiful; often they are simple dietary constituents. Serotonin and dopamine, for example, are made from the dietary amino acids tryptophan and tyrosine, respectively. Acetylcholine is made from dietary choline and lecithin.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 693 \u00b7 Location 11203<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">tyrosine into dopamine.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 693 \u00b7 Location 11211<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">two categories: those that increase signaling across a particular type of synapse, and those that decrease it.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 694 \u00b7 Location 11220<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">\u201cSSRI\u201d\u2014a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 697 \u00b7 Location 11254<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">\u201cfeed-<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 697 \u00b7 Location 11254<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">forward inhibition.\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 699 \u00b7 Location 11283<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">system down for a while. And that is precisely what we often do in such circumstances. An insect bite throbs unbearably, we scratch hard right around it to dull the pain, and the slow, chronic pain pathway is shut down for up to a few minutes.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 705 \u00b7 Location 11351<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">So it\u2019s important to distinguish between \u201cneuronal nuclei\u201d and \u201cfibers of passage.\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Appendix 2: The Basics of Endocrinology<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 707 \u00b7 Location 11365<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Once secreted, it enters the bloodstream, where it can influence any cells throughout the body that possess receptors for it.*<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Appendix 3: Protein Basics<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 713 \u00b7 Location 11457<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">In other words, a more manageable length. That RNA is then shipped to wherever it is supposed to be in the cell, where it then directs which amino acids are strung together in which sequence to form a protein (and there are amino acids floating around in a cell, ready to be grabbed for the protein-construction project). Think of RNA as a photocopy of a single page out of this vast twenty-thousand-page-long DNA encyclopedia.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 715 \u00b7 Location 11475<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">there are three types of mutations that can occur. The first is called a point mutation. One single nucleotide is copied incorrectly.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 715 \u00b7 Location 11487<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Trouble. The next type of classical mutation is called a deletion mutation.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 716 \u00b7 Location 11494<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">Finally, there are insertion mutations. During copying of the DNA to pass on to the next generation, a nucleotide is inadvertently copied twice, duplicated.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Notes<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 721 \u00b7 Location 11609<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">For reviews<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 726 \u00b7 Location 11934<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">V. Salimpoor et al., \u201cInteractions Between the Nucleus Accumbens and Auditory Cortices Predicts Music Reward Value,\u201d Sci 340 (2013): 216; G. Berns and S. Moore, \u201cA Neural Predictor of Cultural Popularity,\u201d J Consumer Psych 22 (2012): 154; S. Erk et al., \u201cCultural Objects Modulate Reward Circuitry,\u201d Neuroreport 13 (2002): 2499.<\/div>\n<div class=\"sectionHeading\">Index<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 790 \u00b7 Location 17992<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">This fact prompted Greene, in a conversation with me, to dryly note how Harvard\u2019s budget projections incorporate the expectation that if they work hard enough, approximately 50 percent of junior faculty will receive tenure.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 790 \u00b7 Location 18462<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">They are just plain \u201cWEIRD\u201d\u2014Westernized, educated, industrialized, rich, and democratic.<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteHeading\">Highlight(<span class=\"highlight_blue\">blue<\/span>) &#8211; Page 790 \u00b7 Location 18689<\/div>\n<div class=\"noteText\">* Related to this was the notion that most of the evolution of behavior was not about dealing with the social complexities of fellow species members but about dealing with abiotic (i.e., nonbiological) pressures. In other words, that behavior evolved mostly for dealing with the environment, rather than for competing with other individuals. Again, the main implication of that for our purposes is that it would be another way in which the gradualist importance of interindividual competition was less than the sociobiologists thought. This emphasis on the importance of abiotic selective pressures was common among Soviet evolutionary biologists, probably reflecting not only the Marxist ideology but also the awful winters.<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Notebook Export Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst Sapolsky, Robert M. Citation (Chicago Style): Sapolsky, Robert M.. Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst. Penguin Publishing Group, 2017. Kindle edition. One: THE BEHAVIOR Highlight(blue) &#8211; Page 19 \u00b7 Location 442 the most context-savvy part of the brain, the &hellip; <\/p>\n<p class=\"link-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/2024\/01\/19\/highlights-and-notes-on-behave-the-biology-of-humans-at-our-best-and-worst-by-sapolsky-robert-m\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Highlights and Notes on Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Sapolsky, Robert M.&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[9],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1612","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-post"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1612","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1612"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1612\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1613,"href":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1612\/revisions\/1613"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1612"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1612"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alteritas.net\/alteritas\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1612"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}