Midterm Review Flashcards
Function of Frontal Lobe
Voluntary movement, thinking, personality, and intentionality or purpose.
Function of Occipital Lobe
For vision.
Function of Temporal Lobe
Active role in hearing, language processing, and memory.
Function of Parietal Lobe
Play important roles involving spatial location, attention, and motor control.
Recommendations of activity for preschool children:
Gross motor skills- hopping, jumping.
Fine motor skills- drawing, cutting, eating
Getting 11 to 13 hours of sleep each night.
Life should be centered around activities, not meals.
Executive Functioning
Learning syntax and how words should be ordered.
Gross motor skills-
Large muscle activities. Ex: hopping, jumping, running back, more adventurous, stunts on playground equipment.
Fine motor skills-
Finely tuned movements. Ex: grasping a spoon, buttoning a shirt, turning pages of a book.
Myelination
The process by which the nerve cells are covered and insulated with a layer of fat cells, which increases the speed at which information travels through the nervous system.
Attachment Categories from the Strange Situation (Mary Ainsworth, 1979)
Securely attached babies- when in the presence of caregiver, infant examines and explores the room, when departing, infants mildly protest, and when caregiver returns, infants re-establishes positive interaction, then resumes playing.
Insecure avoidant babies- avoids the caregiver, not distressed when they leave the room, and usually don’t re-establish contact when returning, may lean away if contact is established.
Insecure resistant babies- cling anxiously to caregiver and don’t explore, is distressed when caregiver leaves but the pushes away when trying to be comforted.
Insecure disorganized babies- dazed, confused and fearful- to be classified as disorganized, infant must show patterns of avoidance or extreme fearfulness around caregiver.
Bowlby’s phases of attachment
1- Birth to 2 months: Infants instinctively direct attachment to human figures. Strangers, siblings, and parents are equally likely to elicit smiling or crying from infant.
2- 2 to 7 months: Attachment becomes focused on one figure, usually primary caregiver, baby gradually learned to distinguish between familiar and unfamiliar people.
3- 7 to 24 months: Specific attachments develop, actively seek contact with regular caregivers.
4- 24 months and on: Children become aware of others’ feelings, goals, and plans and begin to take these into account in forming their own actions.
Harlow’s Experiment
Harry Harlow (1958) removed infant monkeys from their mothers at birth then reared by surrogate mothers- one made of wire and one made of cloth. Half were fed by wire mother and half were fed by cloth mother. How much time they spent with their “mother” was computed. Regardless of which mother fed them, the monkeys spent way more time with the cloth mother. When frightened, the ones raised by cloth mother clung to her but those raised by the wire mother did not.
This study demonstrated that feeding is not the crucial element in the attachment process and that contact comfort is more important.
Erickson’s Lifespan Stages
(1) Trust vs Mistrust: first year of life.
(2) Autonomy vs Shame & Doubt: infancy (1 to 3)
(3) Initiative vs Guilt: early childhood (preschool years 3 o 5)
(4) Industry vs Inferiority: middle and late childhood (6 to puberty)
(5) Identity vs Identity Confusion: Adolescence (10 to 20)
(6) Intimacy vs Isolation: early adulthood (20s, 30s)
(7) Generatively vs Stagnation: middle adulthood (40s, 50s)
(8) Integrity vs Despair: late adulthood (60s and on)
Parenting Styles
Authoritarian: restrictive, limits and controls, enforces rigid rules, have weak communication skills.
Authoritative: encourages children to be independent but still places limits and controls on their actions.
Neglectful: uninvolved, parent’s lives are more important than the child’s.
Indulgent: highly involved but places few demands or controls on them (acts as a friend).
Piaget
Theory of Cognitive Development- reorganization of mental processes as a result of biological maturation and environmental experience.
Freud
Go through 5 stages of psychosexual development.
Erikson
8 lifespan stages through life- each a crisis that must be resolved.
Skinner
Operant Conditioning.