Dictionary Definition
nurture
Noun
1 the properties acquired as a consequence of the
way you were treated as a child [syn: raising, rearing]
2 raising someone to be an accepted member of the
community; "they debated whether nature or nurture was more
important" [syn: breeding, bringing up,
fostering, fosterage, raising, rearing, upbringing]
Verb
1 help develop, help grow; "nurture his talents"
[syn: foster]
3 provide with nourishment; "We sustained
ourselves on bread and water"; "This kind of food is not nourishing
for young children" [syn: nourish, sustain]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈnɛː.tʃər/
- Rhymes: -ɜː(r)tʃə(r)
Noun
Translations
that which nourishes
Translations
to nourish or nurse
- Japanese: 育成する (ikusei-suru)
Related terms
Extensive Definition
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 traits. The view
that humans acquire all or almost all their behavioral traits from
"nurture" is known as tabula rasa
("blank slate"). This question was once considered to be an
appropriate division of developmental influences, but since both
types of factors are known to play such interacting roles in
development, many modern psychologists consider the question naive
- representing an outdated state of knowledge. The famous
psychologist Donald
Hebb is said to have once answered a journalist's question of
"which, nature or nurture, contributes more to personality?" by
asking in response, "which contributes more to the area of a
rectangle, its length or its width?". For a discussion of nature
versus nurture in language and other human
universals, see also psychological
nativism.
Scientific approach
In order to disentangle the effects of genes and
environment, behavioral
geneticists perform adoption and twin
studies. Behavioral
geneticists do not generally use the term "nurture" in order to
explain that portion of the variance for a given trait (such as
IQ or the
Big Five personality traits) that can be attributed to
environmental effects. Instead, two different types of
environmental effects are distinguished: shared family factors
(i.e., those shared by siblings, making them more similar) and
nonshared factors (i.e., those that uniquely affect individuals,
making siblings different). In order to express the portion of the
variance that is due to the "nature" component, behavioral
geneticists generally refer to the heritability of a
trait.
With regard to the
Big Five personality traits as well as adult IQ in the general U.S.
population, the portion of the overall variance that can be
attributed to shared family effects is often negligible. On the
other hand, most traits are thought to be at least partially
heritable. In this context, the "nature" component of the variance
is generally thought to be more important than that ascribed to the
influence of family upbringing.
In her Pulitzer
Prize-nominated book The
Nurture Assumption, author Judith
Harris argues that "nurture," as traditionally defined in terms
of family upbringing does not effectively explain the variance for
most traits (such as adult IQ and the
Big Five personality traits) in the general population of the
United States. On the contrary, Harris suggests that either peer
groups or random environmental factors (i.e., those that are
independent of family upbringing) are more important than family
environmental effects
Although "nurture" has historically been referred
to as the care given to children by the parents, with the mother
playing a role of particular importance, this term is now regarded
by some as any environmental (not genetic) factor in the
contemporary nature versus nurture debate. Thus the definition of
"nurture" has been expanded in order to include the influences on
development arising from prenatal, parental, extended family and
peer experiences, extending to influences such as media, marketing
and socio-economic status. Indeed, a substantial source of
environmental input to human nature may arise from stochastic
variations in prenatal development.
Heritability estimates
While there are many examples of
single-gene-locus traits, current thinking in biology discredits
the notion that genes alone can determine most complex traits. At
the molecular level, DNA interacts with
signals from other genes and from the environment. At the level of
individuals, particular genes influence the development of a trait
in the context of a particular environment. Thus, measurements of
the degree to which a trait is influenced by genes versus
environment will depend on the particular environment and genes
examined. In many cases, it has been found that genes may have a
substantial contribution, including psychological traits such as
intelligence and personality. Yet, these traits may be largely
influenced by environment in other circumstances, such as
environmental deprivation.
A researcher seeking to quantify the influence of
genes or environment on a trait needs to be able to separate the
effects of one factor away from that of another. This kind of
research often begins with attempts to calculate the heritability of a trait.
Heritability quantifies the extent to which variation among
individuals in a trait is due to variation in the genes those
individuals carry. In animals where breeding and environments can
be controlled experimentally, heritability can be determined
relatively easily. Such experiments would be unethical for human
research. This problem can be overcome by finding existing
populations of humans that reflect the experimental setting the
researcher wishes to create.
One way to determine the contribution of genes
and environment to a trait is to study twins.
In one kind of study, identical twins reared apart are compared to
randomly selected pairs of people. The twins share identical genes,
but different family environments. In another kind of twin study,
identical twins reared together (who share family environment and
genes) are compared to fraternal twins reared together (who also
share family environment but only share half their genes). Another
condition that permits the disassociation of genes and environment
is adoption. In one
kind of adoption study, biological siblings reared together (who
share the same family environment and half their genes) are
compared to adoptive siblings (who share their family environment
but none of their genes).
Some have rightly pointed out that environmental
inputs affect the expression of genes. This is one explanation of
how environment can influence the extent to which a genetic
disposition will actually manifest. The interactions of genes with
environment, called gene-environment
interaction, are another component of the nature-nurture
debate. A classic example of gene-environment interaction is the
ability of a diet low in the amino acid phenylalanine to partially
suppress the genetic disease phenylketonuria. Yet
another complication to the nature-nurture debate is the existence
of gene-environment
correlations. These correlations indicate that individuals with
certain genotypes are more likely to find themselves in certain
environments. Thus, it appears that genes can shape (the selection
or creation of) environments. Even using experiments like those
described above, it can be very difficult to determine convincingly
the relative contribution of genes and environment.
Interaction of genes and environment
In only a very few cases is it fair to say that a
trait is due almost entirely to nature, or almost entirely to
nurture. In the case of most diseases now strictly identified as
genetic, such as Huntington's
disease, there is a better than 99.9% correlation between
having the identified gene and the disease and a similar
correlation for not having either. On the other hand, Huntington's
animal models live much longer or shorter lives depending on how
they are cared for (animal husbandry). At the other extreme, traits
such as native
language are environmentally determined: linguists have found
that any child (if capable of learning a language at all) can learn
any human language with equal facility. With virtually all
biological and psychological traits, however, genes and environment
work in concert, communicating back and forth to create the
individual.
Examples of environmental, interactional, and
genetic traits are:
Steven
Pinker (2004) likewise described several examples:
- concrete behavioral traits that patently depend on content provided by the home or culture —which language one speaks, which religion one practices, which political party one supports— are not heritable at all. But traits that reflect the underlying talents and temperaments —how proficient with language a person is, how religious, how liberal or conservative— are partially heritable.
When traits are determined by a complex
interaction of genotype
and environment it is possible to measure the heritability of a trait
within a population. However, many non-scientists who encounter a
report of a trait having a certain percentage heritability imagine
non-interactional, additive contributions of genes and environment
to the trait. As an analogy, some laypeople may think of the degree
of a trait being made up of two "buckets", genes and environment,
each able to hold a certain capacity of the trait. But even for
intermediate heritabilities, a trait is always shaped by both
genetic dispositions and the environments in which people develop,
merely with greater and lesser plasticities associated with these
heritability measures.
Heritability measures always refer to the degree
of variation between individuals in a population. These statistics
cannot be applied at the level of the individual. It is incorrect
to say that since the heritability index of personality is about
.6, you got 60% of your personality from you parents and 40% from
the environment. To help to understand this, imagine that all
humans were genetic clones. The heritability index for all traits
would be zero (all variability between clonal individuals must be
due to environmental factors). And, contrary to erroneous
interpretations of the heritibility index, as societies become more
egalitarian (everyone has more similar experiences) the
heritability index goes up (as environments become more similar,
variability between individuals is due more to genetic
factors).
A highly genetically loaded trait (such as eye
color) still assumes environmental input within normal limits (a
certain range of temperature, oxygen in the atmosphere, etc.). A
more useful distinction than "nature vs. nurture" is "obligate vs.
facultative" —under typical environmental ranges, what traits are
more "obligate" (e.g., the nose —everyone has a nose) or more
"facultative" (sensitive to environmental variations, such as
specific language learned during infancy). Another useful
distinction is between traits that are likely to be adaptations
(such as the nose) and those that are byproducts of adaptations
(such the white color of bones), or are due to random variation
(non-adaptive variation in, say, nose shape or size).
Nature versus nurture in the IQ debate
Evidence suggests that family environmental
factors may have an effect upon childhood IQ, accounting for up to
a quarter of the variance. On the other hand, by late adolescence
this correlation disappears, such that adoptive siblings are no
more similar in IQ than strangers. Moreover, adoption studies
indicate that, by adulthood, adoptive siblings are no more similar
in IQ than strangers (IQ correlation near zero), while full
siblings show an IQ correlation of 0.6. Twin studies reinforce this
pattern: monozygotic (identical) twins raised separately are highly
similar in IQ (0.86), more so than dizygotic (fraternal) twins
raised together (0.6) and much more than adoptive siblings (~0.0).
Consequently, in the context of the "nature versus nurture" debate,
the "nature" component appears to be much more important than the
"nurture" component in explaining IQ variance in the general adult
population of the United States.
Nature versus nurture in personality traits
Personality
is a frequently cited example of a heritable trait that has been
studied in twins and adoptions. Identical twins reared apart are
far more similar in personality than randomly selected pairs of
people. Likewise, identical twins are more similar than fraternal
twins. Also, biological siblings are more similar in personality
than adoptive siblings. Each observation suggests that personality
is heritable to a certain extent. However, these same study designs
allow for the examination of environment as well as genes. Adoption
studies also directly measure the strength of shared family
effects. Adopted siblings share only family environment.
Unexpectedly, some adoption studies indicate that by adulthood the
personalities of adopted siblings are no more similar than random
pairs of strangers. This would mean that shared family effects on
personality are zero by adulthood. As is the case with personality,
non-shared environmental effects are often found to out-weigh
shared environmental effects. That is, environmental effects that
are typically thought to be life-shaping (such as family life) may
have less of an impact than non-shared effects, which are harder to
identify. One possible source of non-shared effects is the
environment of pre-natal development. Random variations in the
genetic program of development may be a substantial source of
non-shared environment. These results suggest that "nurture" may
not be the predominant factor in "environment".
Advanced techniques
The power of quantitative studies of heritable
traits has been expanded by the development of new techniques.
Developmental genetic analysis examines the effects of genes over
the course of a human lifespan. For example, early studies of
intelligence, which mostly examined young children, found heritability measures of 40
to 50 percent. Subsequent developmental genetic analyses have found
that genetic contribution to intelligence increases over a
lifespan, reaching a heritability of 80 percent
in adulthood.
Another advanced technique, multivariate genetic
analysis, examines the genetic contribution to several traits that
vary together. For example, multivariate genetic analysis has
demonstrated that the genetic determinants of all specific
cognitive abilities (e.g., memory, spatial reasoning, processing
speed) overlap greatly, such that the genes associated with any
specific cognitive ability will affect all others. Similarly,
multivariate genetic analysis has found that genes that affect
scholastic achievement completely overlap with the genes that
affect cognitive ability.
Extremes analysis, examines the link between
normal and pathological traits. For example, it is hypothesized
that a given behavioral disorder may represent an extreme of a
continuous distribution of a normal behavior and hence an extreme
of a continuous distribution of genetic and environmental
variation. Depression, phobias, and reading disabilities have been
examined in this context.
For highly heritable traits, it is now possible
to search for individual genes that contribute to variation in that
trait. For example, several research groups have identified genetic
loci that contribute to schizophrenia (Harrison
and Owen, 2003).
Moral difficulties: eugenics, etc.
Some observers believe that modern science tends
to give too much weight to the nature side of the argument, in part
because of social
consciousness. Historically, much of this debate has had
undertones of racist and
eugenicist policies
—the notion of race as a scientific truth has often been assumed as
a prerequisite in various incarnations of the nature versus nurture
debate. In the past, heredity was often used as "scientific"
justification for various forms of discrimination and oppression
along racial and class lines. Works published in the United
States since the 1960s that argue for
the primacy of "nature" over "nurture" in determining certain
characteristics, such as The Bell
Curve, have been greeted with considerable controversy and
scorn.
A critique of moral arguments against the nature
side of the argument could be that they cross the is-ought
gap. That is, they apply values to facts. However, such appliance
appears to construct reality. Belief in biologically determined
stereotypes and abilities has been shown to increase the kind of
behavior that is associated with such stereotypes and to impair
intellectual performance through, among other things, the stereotype
threat phenomenon.
Philosophical difficulties
Are the traits real?
It is sometimes a question whether the "trait" being measured is even a real thing. Much energy has been devoted to calculating the heritability of intelligence (usually the I.Q., or intelligence quotient), but there is still some disagreement as to what exactly "intelligence" is.Biological determinism
If genes do contribute substantially to the development of personal characteristics such as intelligence and personality, then many wonder if this implies that genes determine who we are. Biological determinism is the thesis that genes determine who we are. Few if any scientists would make such a claim; however, many are accused of doing so.Others have pointed out that the premise of the
"nature versus nurture" debate seems to negate the significance of
free
will. More specifically, if all our traits are determined by
our genes, by our environment, by chance, or by some combination of
these acting together, then there seems to be little room for free
will. This line of reasoning suggests that the "nature versus
nurture" debate tends to exaggerate the degree to which individual
human behavior can be predicted based on knowledge of genetics and
the environment. Furthermore, in this line of reasoning, it should
also be pointed out that biology may determine our abilities, but
free will still determines what we do with our abilities.
Is the problem real?
Many scientists feel that the very question opposing nature to nurture is a fallacy. Already in 1951, Calvin Hall in his seminal chapter remarked that the discussion opposing nature and nurture was fruitless. If an environment is changed fundamentally, then the heritability of a character changes, too. Conversely, if the genetic composition of a population changes, then heritability will also change. As an example, we may use phenylketonuria (PKU), which causes brain damage and progressive mental retardation. PKU can be treated by the elimination of phenylalanine from the diet. Hence, a character (PKU) that used to have a virtually perfect heritability is not heritable any more if modern medicine is available. Similarly, within, say, an inbred strain of mice, no genetic variation is present and every character will have a zero heritability. If the complications of gene-environment interactions and correlations (see above) are added, then it appears to many that heritability, the epitome of the nature-nurture opposition, is "a station passed".Myths about identity
Within the debates surrounding cloning, for
example, is the far-fetched contention that a Jesus or a Hitler could be
"re-created" through genetic cloning. Current thinking finds this
largely inaccurate, and discounts the possibility that the clone of anyone would grow up to
be the same individual due to environmental variation. For example,
like clones, identical twins are genetically identical, and unlike
the hypothetical clones share the same family environment, yet they
are not identical in personality and other traits.
History of the nature versus nurture debate
Traditionally, human nature has been thought of as not only inherited but divinely ordained. The differences between men and women, for example, were attributed to God's design. Whole ethnic groups were considered to be, by nature, superior or inferior. In the 19th and 20th centuries, however, intellectuals increasingly attributed differences among races, classes, and genders to socialization (nurture), rather than to innate qualities (nature). In the 20th century, the Nazis pursued an agenda based on the concept of human nature as defined by one's race. The Communists, on the other hand, largely followed Marx's lead in defining the human identity as subject to social structures, not nature. In scientific circles, this conflict led to ongoing controversy of sociobiology and evolutionary psychology.See also
- Cultural anthropology
- Diathesis-stress model
- Epigenetic Theory
- Eugenics
- Gene Illusion, The (book)
- Genetic determinism
- Genetics and violence
- Harris, Judith
- Human nature
- Onion Skin Model
- Inheritance of intelligence
- Language acquisition
- Nurture Assumption, The (book)
- Race and crime
- Reimer, David
- Social determinism
- Stereotype threat
- Tabula rasa
- Twin study
- Race and genetics
References
- Alarcon, M., Plomin, R., Fulker, D.W., Corley, R. & DeFries, J.C. (1998). Multivariate path analysis of specific cognitive abilities: data at 12 years of age in the Colorado Adoption Project. Behavior Genetics 28:255-264.
- Jang, K.L., McCrae, R.R., Angleitner, A. Riemann, R. & Livesley, W.J. (1998). Heritability of facet-level traits in a cross-cultural twin sample: support for a hierarchical model of personality. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 74:1556-1565.
- Joseph, J. (2004)The Gene Illusion: Genetic Research in Psychiatry and Psychology Under the Microscope.New York: Algora. (2003 United Kingdom Edition by PCCS Books)
- Joseph, J. (2006). Missing Gene: Psychiatry, Heredity, and the Fruitless Search for Genes.New York: Algora.
- Harrison PJ, Owen MJ. (2003) Genes for schizophrenia? Recent findings and their pathophysiological implications. Lancet, 361(9355), 417–9.
- Neill, J. T. (2004). Nature vs nurture in intelligence. Wilderdom.
- Pinker, S. (2004) Why nature & nurture won't go away. Dædalus.
- Plomin, R., Fulker, D. W., Corley, R. & DeFries, J. C. (1997). Nature, nurture and cognitive development from 1 to 16 years: a parent-offspring adoption study. Psychological Science 8:442-447.
- Behavioral Genetics (4th Ed.)
- Nature Via Nurture : Genes, Experience, and What Makes Us Human (republished under the title The Agile Gene : How Nature Turns on Nurture)
- Wahlsten, D. (1997). Leilani Muir versus the Philosopher King: eugenics on trial in Alberta. Genetica 99: 185-198.
- At least two Science Fiction novels have plots which bear on this debate (in very different ways from each other): Cyteen by C. J. Cherryh (1988) and The Coming of the Quantum Cats by Frederik Pohl (1986).
nurture in Danish: Arv og miljø
nurture in Spanish: Innato o adquirido
nurture in Persian: پرورش یا طبیعت
nurture in Finnish: Luonto vastaan
kasvatus
nurture in Dutch: Nature-nurture-debat
nurture in Norwegian: Arv og miljø
nurture in Russian: Социогенетизм или
биогенетизм
nurture in Swedish: Arv eller miljö
nurture in Chinese: 先天与后天
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
TLC,
abet, acculturate, advance, aid and abet, aliment, alimentation, ameliorate, amend, apprentice, apprenticeship, ask for,
attend to, baby-sit, back,
basic training, bear,
better, bolster, boost, bosom, bread, break, break in, breaking, breast-feed, breed, breeding, bring forward, bring
up, care, care for,
chaperon, cherish, civilize, cling to, clip, coddle, comestibles, condition, conditioning, conserve, cosset, countenance, cradle, cultivate, cultivation, culture, daily bread, develop, development, discipline, drill, drilling, dry-nurse, eats, economic support, edibles, edify, educate, elevate, embosom, embrace, emend, encourage, endowment, enhance, enlighten, enrich, entertain, exercise, farm, fatten, fatten up, favor, feed, fetch up, fetching-up,
fit, fondle, force-feed, form, forward, foster, fostering, give encouragement,
go straight, groom,
grooming, grow, grub, harbor, hatch, have, have and hold, hold, hold on to, house-train,
housebreak, housebreaking, hug, improve, improve upon, improvement, in-service
training, invite,
keep, keep in countenance,
keep watch over, lactate, lard, lavish care on, lick into
shape, lift, livelihood, living, look after, look out for,
look to, maintenance, make an
improvement, manna, manual
training, matronize,
meat, meliorate, mend, military training, mind, minister to, mother, mothering, nourish, nourishment, nurse, nurturing, nutrify, nutriment, on-the-job
training, pabulum,
pamper, pap, practice, preparation, prepare, preserve, price support,
promote, protege, provender, provide for,
provision, provisions, put in tune, put
to school, raise, raising, ranch, ready, readying, rear, rearing, refection, refine upon,
reform, refreshment, rehearsal, rehearse, ride herd on,
run, school, see after, see to, send
to school, shepherd,
sloyd, socialize, spoon-feed,
straighten out, stuff,
subsidization,
subsidy, subsistence, subvention, suckle, support, sustain, sustainment, sustenance, sustentation, take care of,
take charge of, take in hand, tend, tender loving care, train, training, transfigure, transform, treasure, treasure up, upbringing, upgrade, uphold, upkeep, uplift, viands, victuals, vocational education,
vocational training, watch, watch out for, watch over,
wet-nurse