mod 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is paternity uncertainty?

A

A problem faced only by males, where they are uncertain whether a child is there’s or not. Whereas, females never have to face this problem

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2
Q

What is the sexual over-perception bias?

A

When males tend to assume incorrectly that women are sexually attracted to them

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3
Q

How do evolutionary psychologists explain murder?

A

They explain murder as a form of ‘differential reproductive success’. To improve your reproductive success, you can either better yourself, or diminish your competition.

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4
Q

What group of people typically murder what other group of people?

A

Men murdering men

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5
Q

What are some characteristics that both men and women desire in their partners?

A
  • Intelligence
  • Kindness
  • Understanding
  • Healthy
  • Similar personality, attitudes, and religious beliefs
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6
Q

What things make women attractive to men?

A
  • Youth
  • Health and fertility (healthy hair, skin, facial features indicative of high estrogen)
  • Waist to hip ratio of 0.7
  • Ideal curvature of the spine (wedge-shaped lumbar) for pregnancy
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7
Q

What things make men attractive to women?

A
  • High social status
  • Financial resources
  • Physical formidability
  • Masculine facial features
  • Willingness to invest in children
  • Different immune system (via smell of sweat)
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8
Q

What has research found in terms of the effect of the contraceptive pill on female’s preferences for male’s sweat?

A

Research has found that when on the contraceptive pill, women prefer the sweat of a man with a more similar immune system. Children of mothers who were on the pill at the time of meeting their partner were more likely to get infections, needed more medical care, experienced more sickness, and were perceived as less healthy in general.

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9
Q

What is the naturalistic fallacy and how do evolutionary psychologists feel about it?

A

The naturalistic fallacy is the belief that what is natural is good. While evolutionary psychologists attempt to explain the natural origins of various negative behaviours, they don’t necessarily believe they are good.

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10
Q

How much more are women likely to victims of stalking than men?

A

2.5 times more likely

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11
Q

What are some of the false beliefs often maintained by stalkers?

A
  • Their persistence is truly desired by their victims
  • Their victim’s lack of reciprocation is actually a ‘test’’
  • Any attention the victim gives the stalker signals deeper romantic feelings than actually exist
  • Their stalking behaviours do not inflict serious, lasting, or any other costs on their victims
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12
Q

When might blended families typically separate according to blood relations?

A

In situations of crisis or increased family stress

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13
Q

What is one of the most critical factors that can effect the success of a blended family?

A

The age of the children - younger children adjust quicker and more successfully than older children to the new family structure and living arrangements

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14
Q

What are some of the benefits experienced by members of blended families?

A
  • Decline in depressive symptoms of children of divorced parents
  • Availability of new support and experiences within the blended family structure
  • Refinement of emotional resilience
  • Increase in independent coping skills
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15
Q

What are some of the challenges experienced by members of blended families?

A
  • Creating new family relationships
  • Adjusting to new living arrangements and potential relocation
  • Adjusting to new family and house rules
  • Reviewing and co-parenting and contact arrangements with children’s other parent
  • Dealing with loss of previous family structure and lifestyle
  • Potential parental conflict regarding parenting and family values
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16
Q

Is a genetic tie with one’s child socially and culturally constructed or innate?

A

Socially and culturally constructed

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17
Q

What are the main reasons heterosexual couples undergo fertility treatment?

A
  • Their expectation of becoming parents
  • Complications associated with the adoption process
    Therefore, they don’t do it because they innately believe a child needs a mother and a father
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18
Q

What are the 3 broad groups the Australian population can be divided into based on views towards ART use among hetero and homosexual couples?

A

1) Majority - consistently comfortable with same-sex and hetero use of ART (mostly female, uni educated, left-wing, non church attendees)
2) Minority - comfortable with hetero but not same-sex use of ART (mostly men, retired, conservative voters, frequent church attendees)
3) Small minority - not comfortable with ART use by anyone (mostly frequent church attendees)

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19
Q

What are some of the challenges faced by siblings of children with special needs?

A
  • Reactions from the public
  • Feel the need to be a perfect child to compensate for their sibling
  • Taking on more roles and responsibilities at home
  • Feeling isolated from their sibling with special needs
20
Q

What are some aspects of positive growth that may come from being a sibling of a child with special needs?

A
  • Increased maturity
  • Greater self-control
  • Empathy for others
  • Acceptance and compassion for those with special needs
21
Q

What is the Signposts program?

A
  • Equip parents with skills to manage or prevent difficult child behaviour, encourage appropriate behaviour and teach new skills
22
Q

What is the Incredible Years Training for Parents program?

A
  • Targets parents of high-risk children and/or those displaying behaviour problems
  • Promote children’s social competence and reduce behaviour problems
  • Promote children’s academic skills
23
Q

What is Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)?

A
  • Emphasises improving the quality of the parent-child relationship through skill building and promoting positive parent-child interaction
24
Q

What is the Triple P Positive Parenting Program?

A
  • Designed to prevent social, emotional, behavioural, and developmental problems in children by enhancing their parents knowledge, skills and confidence
  • 5 intervention levels of increasing intensity
25
What is the Tuning in to Kids/Teens program?
- Focus on parents' emotion coaching skills
26
What is the Cool Kids program?
- Teaches parents how to better manage the child's anxiety
27
What is Multi-Family Psychoeducational Psychotherapy?
- Helps parents and children learn about mood disorders and how to effectively manage the symptoms
28
What is the Parenting Wisely program?
- Teaches parents and children skills to improve their communication and relationships, and decrease conflict through support and behaviour management.
29
What are the cognitive characteristics of child anxiety?
- Concentration problems - Attention problems - Memory problems - Oversensitivity - Problem-solving difficulties - Worry - Cognitive dysfunctions - Attributional style problems
30
What are the behavioural characteristics of child anxiety?
- Motor restlessness - Fidgety - Task avoidance - Rapid speech - Erratic behaviour - Irritability - Withdrawal - Perfectionism - Lack of participation - Failing to complete tasks - Seeking easy tasks
31
What are the physiological characteristics of child anxiety?
- Tics - Recurrent, localised pain - Rapid heart rate - Flushing of the skin - Perspiration - Headaches - Muscle tension - Sleeping problems - Nausea - Vomiting - Enuresis
32
Do children present with well-defined or fuzzy anxiety disorders?
Fuzzy
33
What kind of anxiety characteristics should parents look out for with regards to child anxiety?
Behavioural and physiological
34
What are 3 effective techniques for helping kids with anxiety?
- Breathing techniques - Muscle relaxation - Calming statements on cards
35
What are the 2 proposed pathways via which anxiety develops in children?
1. Cumulative risk pathway - a combination of predisposing factors increase the child's risk and exposure to anxiety-triggering events 2. Precipitating events pathway - where anxiety is a learned response to an event/s
36
In terms of the cumulative risk pathway, what constitutes the history of child anxiety?
- Child characteristics: child has a number of risk factors that increase their vulnerability - Also: unstable environment, anxious parenting style, anxious attachment, overprotective parenting, genetic risk for anxiety, wary temperament
37
According the cumulative risk pathway, what are the predisposing factors to child anxiety?
- Genetics - Inhibited temperament - Increased vulnerability
38
According to the precipitating events pathway, what are the predisposing factors for child anxiety?
- Parenting style - Response to an anxious event - Number and intensity of anxiety-provoking events encountered
39
What are some of the maintaining factors shared by both pathways to child anxiety?
- Avoidance of anxiety-provoking situations - Limited development of competencies - Cognitive bias to interpret situations as threatening - Negative experiences - Parent responses that overprotective or controlling
40
How many results does a Google search of "anxiety epidemic in children" give?
over 700,000
41
What does the (limited) data actually say about rates of childhood anxiety?
Rates of adult anxiety have remained stable over the past 30 years, and considering parental anxiety is a risk factor for child anxiety, we can tentatively assume child anxiety has also remained stable over that time.
42
What traits do male dog-lovers tend to behigh on?
Dominance and aggression
43
How do male and female cat-lovers compare?
Female cat lovers are lower on nurturance and males are higher on autonomy.
44
Are dog lovers higher or lower on hostility?
Lower
45
How do cat and dog lovers differ in terms of the Big 5 Personality traits?
Dog lovers are higher on extraversion, agreeableness, and conscientiousness. Cat lovers are higher on neuroticism and openness to experience
46
What were the 2 main findings of the pets/dating study?
1. Women express more discerning views on the roles of pets in dating than men 2. The role of pet dogs and cats differed significantly, with dogs serving more diagnostic purposes than cat's for assessing a date's caregiving expressions