Revision as of 11:28, 9 July 2016 editNjacobson88 (talk | contribs)9 edits I added recent empirical research to the page (including both the content and citations). The page also previously contained speculation and opinions that were not accurate and would not be shaped by evolution. Consequently, I removed inaccuracies.Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 00:30, 2 May 2018 edit undoJytdog (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers187,951 edits fixTag: Redirect target changed | ||
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'''Evolutionary developmental psychopathology''' is an approach to the understanding of ]. Modern evolutionary psychopathology examines the current adaptiveness of psychiatric disorders by examine their impact on fertility across the lifespan <ref>Jacobson, N.C. (2016). Current Evolutionary Adaptiveness of Psychiatric Disorders: Fertility Rates, Parent-Child Relationship Quality, and Psychiatric Disorders. Journal of Abnormal Psychology </ref> | |||
Evolutionary developmental Psychology can be based on the following.: | |||
* human ]s were forged to function in past environments rather than the current environment; | |||
* humans are constantly evolving, and thus one can study the adaptiveness of psychopathology in the current environment to establish their prevalence in the near future;<ref>Jacobson, N.C. (2016). Current Evolutionary Adaptiveness of Psychiatric Disorders: Fertility Rates, Parent-Child Relationship Quality, and Psychiatric Disorders. Journal of Abnormal Psychology </ref> | |||
* research should be particularly attentive to any data showing ] and changes in psychological functioning and neural architecture across the lifespan, and therefore to comparisons between ], ], and ]. | |||
* all study of evolutionary psychopathology requires a trait to be at least partially heritable. Thus examining the heritabilitiy of a trait is the first step in research. <ref>Jacobson, N.C. (2016). Current Evolutionary Adaptiveness of Psychiatric Disorders: Fertility Rates, Parent-Child Relationship Quality, and Psychiatric Disorders. Journal of Abnormal Psychology </ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
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== External links == | |||
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{{Evolutionary psychology|state=expanded}} | |||
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