The biological approach to schizophrenia examines how biological factors like genes, brain structure, and neurochemistry contribute to the development of this complex mental disorder. This perspective emphasizes that psychological processes have biological underpinnings and takes a nature-focused, reductionist, and deterministic view. Key areas of study include genetic inheritance, dopamine activity in the brain, and structural brain differences in schizophrenia patients.
- Genetic studies show increased risk with closer biological relationships
- Twin and adoption studies support a genetic component
- Over 100 gene locations linked to schizophrenia risk
- Dopamine hypothesis proposes imbalances in dopamine activity
- Brain imaging reveals enlarged ventricles in some patients
- Biological factors interact with environmental influences