Topic 8 Flashcards
1
Q
height
A
- females complete growth spurt 2 years earlier (16.5 yrs)
- males 4-6in taller
- regression starts in 3rd decade
2
Q
weight
A
- decreases 1st few days after birth (mothers don’t produce breast milk until 3-4 days)
- doubles by 4 months
- triples by 1 year
- quadruples by 2 years
- increases 20x=mature age
- half of mature age @ 10 years
3
Q
examples of how body proportions effect motor performance
A
- males: advantage for throwing/striking-longer arms
- females: advantage for balance-shorter legs, broader pelvis, lower center of gravity
- males taller, heavier, wider shoulders, longer arms and legs, more mm and bigger bones
- females lower center of gravity and wider hips (insertion of femur more oblique)
4
Q
maturation
A
qualitative, functional changes that occur with age and indicate organizational changes in the function of tissues/organs
- biological clock
- estimated using chronological age and biological age (dental, skeletal, and sexual)
5
Q
dental age
A
focus on when teeth erupt: deciduous=6mo-2 yrs, permanent=6mo-13 yrs
-deciduous teeth essential for speaking, chewing, and providing an opening for permanent teeth
6
Q
skeletal age
A
- best indicator of maturity, x-rays of left hand/wrist and comparative data used
- information spans entire growth period and has a clear beginning and end point
- all typically developing people reach a stage of skeletal maturity
- females 20% more mature (2 mo more at 1 year and 2 years more at age 10)
7
Q
early maturer
late maturers
A
- taller and heavier, displays more body fat during adolescence. Males more mesomorphic (culturally significant, often an advantage), females more endomorphic
- exhibit catch-up growth by late adolescence/early childhood, more ectomorphic, less body fat