Chapter 13 Flashcards

1
Q

What is Developmental Psychology?

A

The study of physiological and cognitive changes across the lifespan, and how these are affected by culture, circumstance, and experience.

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2
Q

Define Socialization?

A

The process by which children learn the behaviours, attitudes, and expectations required of them by their society or culture.

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3
Q

What are some agents that can cross the placenta barrier?

A

German measles, Xrays/radiation, toxic chemicals, STDs, cigarette smoking, alcohol, and other drugs.

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4
Q

Older fathers increase the risk of what if they conceive a child?

A

Triple the risk for schizophrenia and increase the risk of autism/bipolar.

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5
Q

What can happen to the child if either of the parents are teenagers?

A

Premature/low birth weight.

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6
Q

What can German Measles cause?

A

It affects the eyes, ears, and heart; can lead to deafness. There is a vaccine mothers can get to precent this.

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7
Q

What can radiation/mercury/lead cause?

A

Fetal deformities and cognitive abnormalities.

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8
Q

What can STDs cause?

A

Mental retardation, blindness, physical disorders.

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9
Q

What can Cigarette Smoking cause?

A

Miscarriage/premature birth/low birth weight/abnormal heartbeat/SIDS/asthma/low immune system function.

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10
Q

What can Alcohol cause?

A

Mental retardation, FAS (low birth weight, facial deformities, smaller brain). 1-3/1000 children in Canada are affected.

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11
Q

What can Drugs (other than Alcohol) cause?

A

Impaired cognitive and language abilities.

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12
Q

What can Drugs (other than Alcohol) cause?

A

Impaired cognitive and language abilities.

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13
Q

What Physical Abilities do Newborns have?

A

Rooting, sucking, swallowing, Moro (‘startle’), Babinski (toes), grasp, stepping, blink, sneeze, knee jerk, respond to touch.

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14
Q

What is the Grasping Reflex?

A

Infants are born with the instinct ability to cling to offered touch.

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15
Q

What Perceptual Abilities do Newborns have?

A

Visual Abilities - visual range is about 8 inches, and they can distinguish contrasts, shadows, and edges. They can hear, touch, and smell.

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16
Q

What impact does culture have on maturation?

A

Many aspects of development depend on cultural customs, such as an infant’s ability to sleep alone. The recommendation that babies sleep on their backs has led to many skipping the crawling stage.

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17
Q

Define Contact Comfort.

A

(Primates) The innate pleasure derived from close physical contact; it is the basis of the infant’s first attachment, and crucial throughout life.

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18
Q

What is the Strange Situation Test?

A

A parent-infant “separation and reunion” procedure that is staged in a laboratory to test the security of a child’s attachment.

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19
Q

Define Separation Anxiety.

A

The distress that most children develop at around 6-8 months of age, when their primary caregivers temporarily leave them with strangers. Usually ends between 2-3 years of age.

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20
Q

Define Securely Attached.

A

A parent-infant relationship in which the baby is secure when the parent is present, distressed by separation, and delighted by reunion.

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21
Q

Define Insecurely Attached.

A

A parent-infant relationship in which the baby clings to the parent, cries at separation, and reacts with anger or apathy to reunion. Avoidant - treats the caregiver the same as stranger. Anxious/ambivalent - doesn’t want caregiver to leave, but resists contact with caregiver.

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22
Q

At what age does separation anxiety start to disappear?

A

15 months.

23
Q

What can cause Insecure Attachment?

A

Abandonment and deprivation in first year or two of life, abusive/neglectful/erratic parenting, genetic predisposition, stressful circumstances in child’s family.

24
Q

What are the stages of Language development?

A

Acquisition of speech begins in the first few months, they are responsive to pitch, intensity, and sound (parentese is used). By 4-6 months, they can recognize their names and repetitive words. By 6 months - 1 year, infants become familiar with sentence structure and start babbling.End of 1st year, using symbolic gestures. 12 months, label objects with words. 18-24 months ‘telegraphic speech’.By age six, they have a vocabulary between 8000-14000 words.

25
Q

What does Thinking consist of according to Piaget?

A

Cognitive development consists of mental adaptations to new observations and experiences.

26
Q

What two forms of Adaptation can occur in regards to cognitive development?

A

Assimilation (assimilating or absorbing new information into existing cognitive structures) and Accommodation (accommodating or modifying existing cognitive structures in response to experience and new information).

27
Q

What are the four stages of Piaget’s Stages of Development?

A
  1. Sensorimotor 2. Preoperational3. Concrete Operational 4. Formal Operational
28
Q

What occurs in the Sensorimotor Stage?

A

Birth-2 years; coordinated sensory information with bodily movements. Concrete objects.Object permanence develops in the first year.

29
Q

What occurs in the Preoperational Stage?

A

2-7 years. Focused on the limitations of child’s thinking; that they lack the cognitive abilities for abstract principles, mental operations (if I’m your sister, you must be my brother), and were egocentric. Can’t grasp conservation (juice amount doesn’t change regardless of glass size; conservation of substance and of number).

30
Q

What occurs in the Concrete Operations Stage?

A

7-12 years, children’s thinking is still grounded in concrete experiences but now they can understand conservation, reversibility, mental operations, and cause and effect.

31
Q

What occurs in the Formal Operations Stage?

A

12 years to adulthood. Ability for abstract reasoning; understanding that ideas can be compared and classified. Reasoning about situations not personally experiences, thinking about the future, searching systematically for situations to problems.

32
Q

What are some problems with Piaget’s Theory?

A

The stages are not as clear cut, children can understand more, preschoolers are not completely egocentric, cognitive development depends on the child’s education and culture, overestimation of the cognitive skills of many adults.

33
Q

What is Vygotsky’s Theory on Thinking?

A

Sociocultural influence on children’s cognitive development; adults play a role through constant guiding and teaching. Private speech - once children acquire language and rules of culture, they begin to talk to themselves to direct their own behaviour - first speech is spoken out loud, and then internalized and silent. “Family Systems Theory”, collaborate in learning (assisted performance and individual performance).

34
Q

What is Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral Reasoning?

A
  1. Preconventional Level (Punishment and obedience; instrumental relativism)2. Conventional Level (good boy-nice girl, society-maintaining)3. Postconventional Level (social contract, universal ethical principles)
35
Q

What are criticisms of Kohlberg’s Theory?

A

It tends to overlook educational and cultural influences (cultural differences not reflected in theory), moral reasoning in often inconsistent across situations; connection between moral reasoning and moral behaviour is often indirect.

36
Q

What is Moral Behaviour?

A

The ability, in addition to cognitively understanding right from wrong, for children to behave morally based on the development of moral emotions such as shame, guilt, and empathy. Techniques used by parents include power assertion and induction.

37
Q

What is Power Assertion?

A

Moral Behaviour technique, parent uses punishment and authority to correct child’s misbehaviour. Users tend to be authoritarian. The ability to self-regulate can be delayed with this technique.

38
Q

What is Induction?

A

Moral Behaviour technique, parent appeals to child’s own resources, abilities, sense of responsibility, and feelings for others in correcting misbehaviour. Users tend to be authoritative.

39
Q

Define Gender Identity.

A

The fundamental sense of being male or female; it is independent of whether the person conforms to social and cultural rules of gender.

40
Q

Define Gender Typing.

A

Process by which children learn the abilities, interests, personality traits, and behaviours associated with being masculine or feminine in their culture.

41
Q

What are some influences on gender development?

A

Biological factors (hormones, genes, brain organization), cognitive factors (gender schemas - a mental network of knowledge, beliefs, metaphors, and expectations about what it means to be male or female), learning factors (reinforced by others), and gender typing (which at a young age has little to do with adult behaviour).

42
Q

Which gender tends to have higher self-esteem?

A

Males.

43
Q

What is Adolescence?

A

The period of life from puberty to adulthood.

44
Q

What is Puberty?

A

The age at which a person becomes capable of sexual reproduction.

45
Q

What is Menarche?

A

A girl’s first menstrual period.

46
Q

What is Spermarche?

A

A boy’s first ejaculation (nocturnal emission).

47
Q

Early versus late onset puberty: males.

A

Early maturing boys have more positive views of their bodies and are more likely to smoke, binge drink, and break the law.

48
Q

Early versus late onset puberty: females.

A

Early maturing females are usually socially popular but also regarded by peer group as precocious and sexually active. They are more likely to fight with parents, drop out of school and have a negative body image.

49
Q

What are Erikson’s Eight Stages of Life?

A
  1. Trust vs. Mistrust [Infancy (0-1 year)]2. Autonomy vs. Shame and doubt [Toddler (1-2 years)]3. Initiative vs. Guilt [Preschool (3-5 years)]4. Industry vs. Inferiority [Elementary School (6-12 years)]5. Identity vs. Role confusion [Adolescence (13-19 years)]6. Intimacy vs. Isolation [Young adulthood (20-40 years)]7. Generativity vs. Stagnation [Middle adulthood (40-65 years)]8. Integrity vs. Despair [Late adulthood (65 and older)]
50
Q

What is Emerging Adulthood?

A

(18-25) Phase of life distinctly different from adolescence and adulthood; in some ways and adult, in others not.

51
Q

What is The Middle Years?

A

(35-65) Perceived by many experiencing it as the prime of live. Menopause.

52
Q

What is Old Age?

A

When some types of thinking changes, and others stay the same. Fluid intelligence and crystallized intelligence.

53
Q

What is Fluid Intelligence?

A

The capacity for deductive reasoning and the ability to use new information to solve problems, it is relatively independent of education and tends to decline in old age.

54
Q

What is Crystallized Intelligence?

A

Cognitive skills and specific knowledge of information acquired over a lifetime; it depends heavily on education and tends to remain stable over the lifetime.