PSC142 part 2 Flashcards
Duchenne smile
A smile reflecting genuine pleasure, shown in crinkles around the eyes as well as an upturned mouth.
Emotional display rules
An implicit understanding in a culture of how and when an emotion should be expressed.
Emotional scripts
A scheme that enables a child to identify the emotional reaction likely to accompany a particular event.
Emotion regulation
The managing, monitoring, evaluating, and modifying of emotional reactions to reduce the intensity and duration of emotional arousal.
Primary emotions
Fear, joy, disgust, surprise, sadness, and interest, which emerge early in life and do not require introspection or self‐reflection.
Secondary emotions
Pride, shame, guilt, jealousy, embarrassment, and empathy, which emerge in the second year of life and depend on a sense of self and the awareness of other people’s reactions.
Social referencing
The process of reading emotional cues in others to help determine how to act in an uncertain situation.
Babbling/cooing
Babbling - An infant’s production of strings of consonant–vowel combinations.
Cooing - A very young infant’s production of vowel‐like sounds.
Holophrase
A single word that appears to represent a complete thought.
Pragmatics
A set of rules that specify appropriate language for particular social contexts.
Prejudice/stereotype
stereotype - A general label applied to individuals based solely on their membership in a racial, ethnic, or religious group, without appreciation that individuals within the group vary.
prejudice - A set of attitudes by which an individual defines all members of a group negatively.
Telegraphic speech
Two‐word or three‐word utterances that include only the words essential to convey the speaker’s intent.
Theory of mind
Children’s understanding that people have mental states such as thoughts, beliefs, and desires that affect their behavior. It allows children to get beyond people’s observable actions and appearances and respond to their unseen states.
Authoritarian parenting
A child‐rearing style that is harsh, unresponsive, and rigid and tends to use power‐assertive methods of control.
Authoritative parenting
A child‐rearing style that is warm, responsive, and involved and sets reasonable limits and expects appropriately mature behavior from children.