PSYCH; Lecture 5, 6, 7 and 8 - Developmental psychology, Death, dying and bereavement, Individual differences and Coping with illness and treatment Flashcards
What is developmental psychology?
Scientific study of changes that occur in people over the course of their lives -> changes in thought, behaviour, reasoning and functioning occur influenced by biological, individual and environmental infuences
What is the influence of heredity and caregiving in children’s development?
Nature sets course via genetics, gender, temperament and maturational stages; nurture shapes predetermined course via environment, parenting, stimulation and nutrition. How baby progresses depends on interchange between organism and child
What is the babies’ contribution and process of reciprocal socialization?
Baby recognises mother as memory of her is built up in utero via hearing, smell and taste; Bidirectional, with children socialising parents and parents socialising children = baby cries/moves/smiles and parent then mirrors, repeats, interprets and responds
When do babies’ 5 senses come about?
Babies can hear in womb with receptive hearing from 16/40 and functional hearing from 24/40; babies can be primed to learn very quickly about smells associated with their mothers (to own amniotic fluid, smell of maternal breast odours, smell of mother’s breast milk c.f. other breast milks; newborn can sense all tastes except salt (until 4 months), with babies loving sweet/sugar solution and glutamate (found in breast milk); babies can recognise faces a few hours after birth, prefer mothers face, faces and face-like stimuli and engaged faces
How do parents provide a supportive environment for development?
Through scaffolding, reciprocal socialisation, providing a stimulating and enriching environment, give babies resources to thrive and develop
What is attachment?
Theory which describes a biological instinct that seeks proximity to attachment figure when threat is perceived/discomfort is experienced -> sense of safety child experiences, provides a secure base from which they can explore environment thus promoting development -> establishment begins even before birth supported by reciprocal socialisation
What is mind-mindedness?
Parents with mind-mindedness treat their children as individuals with minds, respond as if child’s acts are meaningful, motivated by feeling, thoughts or intentions, helping child to understand emotions
When does attachment develop?
Birth to 3M -> prefer people to inanimate objects, indiscriminate proximity seeking; 3-8M -> smiles discriminately to main caregivers; 8-12M -> selective approach main caregivers, uses social referencing/ familiar adults as secure base to explore new situations; from 12M corrected age: attachment behaviour can be measured reliably
What are the styles of attachment?
Secure = formed in early infancy and are protective factor leading to resilience throughout life span, insecure = individual at risk but not causative of later problems. Securely attached child (free exploration of room and happiness when mum returns - 65%); insecurely attached children (35%): avoidant-insecure = little exploration and little emotional response to mother; ambivalent (resistant-insecure) = little exploration, great separation anxiety and ambivalent response to mother upon return; disorganised insecure children = little exploration and confused response to mother
What do secure attachments promote and are associated with?
Promotes: independence, emotional availability, better moods, better emotional coping -> associated with fewer behavioural problems, higher IQ and academic performance, contributes moral development and reduces child distress; in adolescence and adulthood = social competence, loyal friendships, more secure parenting of offspring, greater leadership qualities and resistance to stress, less mental health problems (anxiety and depression and psychopathology like schizophrenia)
What is play for children?
Important positive effects on brain and on child ability to learn
What is piaget’s theory of cognition?
Piaget stage model = children’s thinking changes qualitatively with age due o interaction of brains biological maturation and personal experience, development occurring as we acquire more schemas and as existing schemas become more complex -> process of assimilation and accommodation which leads to adaptation
What are schemas?
Organised patterns of thought and action
What is piaget’s sensorimotor stage?
Birth to 2y = infants understand world through sensory experiences and physical interactions with objects; objects permanence (understanding object continues to exist even when it can’t be seen; gradual increase use of words to represent objects, needs and actions, with learning based on trial and error
What is Piaget’s preoperational stage?
Animism = ‘naughty chair’
What is Piaget’s concrete operational stage?
x
How do children develop concept of death?
Under 5s: do not understand that death is final, universal, will take euphemisms concretely, may think they have caused death. 5 to 10 years: gradually develop idea of death as irreversible, all functions ended, universal/unavoidable, more empathic to another’s loss; may be preoccupied with justice 10yrs through adolescence: understand more of long-term consequences, able to think hypothetically, draw parallels, review inconsistencies Dependent on cognitive development and experience (pets, extended family members)
What is adolescence and what are the changes in cognition, emotion and relationships?
x
What occurs in adolescent brains?
x
What is the effect of illness and chronic diseases on patients?
2-3x more likely to develop depression than the rest of the popn with one long term condition, 7x more likely with >3 conditions -> having MH problem increases risk of physical ill health, comorbid depression doubles risk of CHD
What is the self-regulatory model?
Interpretation: make sense of disease that they are seeing, checking for cure/what it entails; coping: patient attempts to deal with problem to maintain sense of balance
What is the Kubler-Ross’s stage theory?
Reaction to terminal illness -> Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression and Acceptance. Patients often don’t understand the psychological impact
What is Denial in Kubler-ross theory?
Person think it’s not really happening, temporary situation, telling themselves it is temporary and everything will be back to normal soon -> often used as a psych defence in attempt to cushion impact of source of grief
What is Anger in Kubler-ross theory?
Person thinks ‘why me?’, feels generalised rage at the world for allowing something like this to happen; feel isolated and furious, think its unfair and may feel betrayed; outbursts of anger in unrelated situations can occur
What is Bargaining in Kubler-Ross theory?
Person thinks ‘if I do this, I can make it better and fix things’. May feel guilt and feel it is their responsibility to fix the problems, often try to strike bargains with God, spouses
What is Depression in Kubler-Ross theory?
The person thinks “my heart feels broken” or “this loss is really going to happen and it’s really sad”; person is absorbed in the intense emotional pain that they feel from having their world come apart, can be overwhelmed with feelings of helplessness and sadness
What is Acceptance in Kubler-Ross theory?
Person thinks “this did occur, but I have great memories” or “it is sad but I have so much to live for and so many to love” The loss is accepted and we work on alternatives to coping with the loss and to minimise the loss
What is the problem of pathologising patients that don’t go through the stages of Kubler-ross theory?
Post-traumatic growth -> learn things after a traumatic incident; good vs bad = those that work through the stages are seen as good patients, with those still showing the problems in the stages are the bad patients