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First exams 2027

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Biological Structures & Neurochemistry (AQA A Level Psychology): Revision Note

Exam code: 7182

Raj Bonsor

Written by: Raj Bonsor

Reviewed by: Cara Head

Updated on

Biological structures & neurochemistry

  • The biological approach assumes that structures such as the nervous system, the endocrine system and the brain play a key role in human behaviour

The nervous system

  • The human nervous system  comprises

    • Central Nervous System (CNS):

      • This consists of the brain and the spinal cord

      • The CNS receives, sends and responds to sensory information

    • Peripheral Nervous System (PNS):

      • This relays information between the body and the brain

      • This information includes involuntary responses such as breathing and heartbeat as well as sensory information and control of voluntary movement

Diagram depicting the human nervous system. Labels indicate the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) and peripheral nerves.
The nervous system is comprised of the central nervous system (CNS) and the rest of the nerves, the peripheral nervous system (PNS)

The endocrine system

  • The endocrine system is a chemical messaging system that operates throughout the body 

  • The endocrine system secretes hormones into the bloodstream from different glands e.g.

    • The pituitary gland is the major endocrine gland (known as the master gland )

      • it makes, stores and releases hormones

      • it instructs other glands to release hormones as well

    • Examples of hormones include adrenaline (flight or fight), testosterone (male sex hormone), oxytocin (attachment and bonding)

The brain

  • The brain is made up of different regions which are localised to specific tasks e.g.

    • Temporal Lobe

      • This lobe controls hearing/auditory perception 

      • It also controls speech comprehension

    • Frontal Lobe  

      • This lobe is linked to voluntary movement and expressive language

      • The prefrontal cortex in particular is linked to executive functioning e.g. impulse control

    • Cerebellum 

      • This lobe receives information from the spinal cord, sensory systems and other parts of the brain 

      • It regulates balance and motor movements 

Diagram of the human brain labeling the hypothalamus, cerebrum, cerebellum, pituitary gland, spinal cord, and medulla oblongata with their functions.
The brain structure is separated into different areas, each responsible for different actions or tasks

Evaluation of biological structures & neurochemistry

Strengths

  • Research into biological structures uses objective, clinical methods and measures e.g.

    • Zak et al. (2009) measured testosterone levels in blood samples and linked these to a lack of prosocial behaviour

    • Maguire et al. (2000) used MRI scans to investigate the role of the hippocampus in spatial navigation

      • The results derived from using these measures can be checked for consistency across time and samples which means they have good reliability

  • There is some compelling evidence in support of evolution and behaviour

    • Curtis et al. (2004) found that people showed higher levels of disgust for disease-salient images than for neutral images

    • Disgust is an evolutionary mechanism as it prevents people from ingesting toxic materials

    • Thus, if people have an innate disgust response to rotten, mouldy food this lends validity to the idea that humans are biologically programmed for survival

Limitations

  • The results of research into biological structures are overly reductionist e.g.

    • levels of testosterone cannot alone account for a lack of prosocial behaviour, other factors such as personality and upbringing could explain this

    • spatial navigation is also a product of cognition and social factors e.g. having a good memory and being familiar with specific London streets since childhood

  • Some behaviours which are not advantageous to a 21st-century person remain e.g.

    • aggression is, on a practical level, unnecessary for most people

      • We don't need to fight competitors for food or grapple with dangerous predators daily

      • Being overly aggressive is likely to lead to police involvement and/or alienation from friends and family

      • Thus, an evolutionary explanation of behaviour has limited usefulness

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Raj Bonsor

Author: Raj Bonsor

Expertise: Psychology & Sociology Content Creator

Raj joined Save My Exams in 2024 as a Senior Content Creator for Psychology & Sociology. Prior to this, she spent fifteen years in the classroom, teaching hundreds of GCSE and A Level students. She has experience as Subject Leader for Psychology and Sociology, and her favourite topics to teach are research methods (especially inferential statistics!) and attachment. She has also successfully taught a number of Level 3 subjects, including criminology, health & social care, and citizenship.

Cara Head

Reviewer: Cara Head

Expertise: Biology & Psychology Content Creator

Cara graduated from the University of Exeter in 2005 with a degree in Biological Sciences. She has fifteen years of experience teaching the Sciences at KS3 to KS5, and Psychology at A-Level. Cara has taught in a range of secondary schools across the South West of England before joining the team at SME. Cara is passionate about Biology and creating resources that bring the subject alive and deepen students' understanding