2003
DOI: 10.1037/0033-2909.129.6.819
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Developmental Dynamics: Toward a Biologically Plausible Evolutionary Psychology.

Abstract: There has been a conceptual revolution in the biological sciences over the past several decades. Evidence from genetics, embryology, and developmental biology has converged to offer a more epigenetic, contingent, and dynamic view of how organisms develop. Despite these advances, arguments for the heuristic value of a gene-centered, predeterministic approach to the study of human behavior and development have become increasingly evident in the psychological sciences during this time. In this article, the author… Show more

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Cited by 288 publications
(322 citation statements)
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“…However, there is ample of evidence that genetic factors are always part and parcel of the individual organism's entire developmental system (16). The infant monkeys would learn that they move their eyes when they look at objects and move their mouth when they eat.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, there is ample of evidence that genetic factors are always part and parcel of the individual organism's entire developmental system (16). The infant monkeys would learn that they move their eyes when they look at objects and move their mouth when they eat.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In recent years, evolutionary and developmental psychologists have also used evolutionary theory to derive hypotheses about behavioural development (e.g. [69,70]). As a complete understanding of human behavioural diversity requires all four of Tinbergen's questions to be addressed, behavioural ecology and evolutionary psychology can potentially be viewed as both compatible and complementary.…”
Section: Integrating Evolutionary Perspectives On Human Behaviourmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(iv) Niche construction Early attempts at applying evolutionary theory to human behaviour were heavily criticized for failing to take development into account [70,117]. However, it remains a moot point as to whether the human evolutionary behavioural sciences have adequately addressed the arguments of those developmental and evolutionary biologists that emphasize developmental plasticity and the complex, constructive interplay between the developing organism and the environment [118][119][120].…”
Section: (I) Variation and Universalsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the same way that investigators are often bound by the "cognitive box" (1) of the DSM when examining atypical development, they are also generally obliged to conduct their analysis as if typically developing comparison populations represent a monolithic group. Although consensus remains elusive on defining specific personality or cognitive "types" (18,19), substantial evidence has accrued that individual differences in successful adaptive psychological styles are central to human development, functioning, social cohesion, and health outcomes (20)(21)(22)(23). It may be that identifying a mechanism associated with a mental disorder requires comparing individuals to well-adjusted persons with the same cognitive style or profile.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%