week 9 Flashcards

1
Q

define: emotions

A
  • feeling or affect
  • triggered in situations important to indiv.
  • controlled by limbic sys.
    ⤷ amygdala
  • basic emo.:
    ⤷ happy, anger, surprise, disgust, sadness, fear, interest
  • subjective feelings
    ⤷ physiological or overt
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2
Q

explain: timeline of dev. of emotions (1 - 6 mths)

A
  • 1 mth = infants smile (maybe reflex)
  • 2 - 3 mths = social smiles
  • 4 - 6 mths = anger
  • 6 mths = fear
    ⤷ stranger anxiety

**least understood emo. = disgust

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3
Q

define: complex emo.

A
  • self-conscious or secondary emo.
  • ex. pride, shame, guilt, despair, jealousy
  • involves feelings of success and failure
    ⤷ based on expectations/standards
  • around 18 - 24 mths
    ⤷ req. dev. of self
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4
Q

question: when does regret and relief develop?

A
  • age 9
  • need prefrontal cortex maturation to think abstractly
  • regret + relief needs ability to think about what could have been + what should’ve been diff.
  • context for emotions changes w/ more dev.
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5
Q

explain: effect of culture on emotion dev.

A
  • cultures change extent to which expression is encouraged
  • asian cultures = restraint > outward displays
  • european cultures = showed crying and smiling more than chinese infants
  • diff. cultural contexts for pride and shame
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6
Q

explain: timeline for recognizing emotions

A
  • 6 mths = differentiate happy and sad faces
  • use social referencing (look at caregiver to know)
    ⤷ 12 mths = less likely to play w/ toy is caregiver looks afraid
    ⤷ 18 mths = less likely to play w/ toy is adult says it’s annoying
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7
Q

explain: dev. of emotional regulation

A
  • attention = divert attention to less emotional stim.
  • use strat. to reappraise meaning of event so it’s less emotional
  • greater cog. skills -> greater emotional regulation
  • comes down to indiv. diff.
    ⤷ those who can’t regular have adjustment problems
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8
Q

explain: how self-soothing develops

A

infant signals distress -> care giver resp. by soothing -> parent models how to soothe -> infant learns that resp. in that way can reduce emo.

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9
Q

define: temperament

A
  • infants’ emotional reactivity and regulation
  • easy = happy, adjusts well to new sit., can stick to regular routines
  • difficult = unhappy, irregular eating sleeping, responds intensely to new sit.
  • slow-to-warm-up child = low activity level, low intensity of mood
    ^based on thomas and chess

**not all babies fit in a category, can fall in between

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10
Q

explain: kagan’s behavioural inhibition

A
  • some kids are just naturally more shy
    ⤷ supports that temperament is more biological
  • diff. between introverted timid vs extraverted bold
  • inhibition to the unfamiliar = initial avoidance, distress, subdued effect
    ⤷ begins 7 - 9 mths, consistent up to 7 years of age
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11
Q

explain: rothbart’s 3 dimensions

A
  • most recent idea of temperaments
  • babies show features of 3 domains (in diff. amounts):
    1. extraversion/surgency = happy, active, seeks interesting stim.
    2. negative affect = angry, fearful, frustrated, shy
    3. effortful control = focus attention, not easily distracted, can inhibit resp.
  • supports biologically based diff. in temperament
  • helps in parenting application
    ⤷ changing based on baby’s temperament
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12
Q

explain: heredity of temperament

A
  • diff. dep. on dimension and age
  • negative affect more influenced by heredity
  • MZ more similar than DZ
    ⤷ shows biological evi.
  • temperament in childhood shows higher heritability than infancy
    ⤷ less variance in envrt. bc school
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13
Q

define: goodness of fit (for temperament)

A
  • how well does a child’s temperament meet the envrt. demands
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14
Q

explain: drd4 gene

A
  • dopamine
  • involved in regulating attention, motivation, reward
    ⤷ all involved w/ temperament
  • some variants of drd4 make indiv. more susceptible to envrt. effects
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15
Q

explain: kitayama 2014 study on gene x culture on social orientation

A
  • spectrum from interdependent to independent
    ⤷ inter = benefit the group (collectivist)
    ⤷ indep = independent person
  • non drd4 carriers for both europeans and asians = close to 0 (no pref. for either)
  • asian carriers = more inter
  • european carriers = more indep.
  • shows that drd4 variant carriers = more susceptible to envrt. influence

**shows not only envrt but also genetics
⤷ genes change how envrt. influences indiv.

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16
Q

explain: gene x envrt. temperament loop

A

genes change the way we think -> changes interactions -> changes gene exp. -> changes beha. -> loop

17
Q

define: attachment

A
  • social-emo relationship between baby and caretaker
  • lack of attachment -> detrimental effects
  • touch = foundational for social-emo dev.
18
Q

explain: john bowlby’s attachment stages

A

PRE-ATTACHMENT
- 0 - 2 mths
- recog. mother smell
- reflexes improve survival

ATTACHMENT-IN-THE-MAKING
- 2 - 7 mths
- recognize adults
- beha. diff. to diff. adults

TRUE ATTACHMENT
- 7 - 24 mths
- specific attachments w/ regular caregivers

RECIPROCAL RELATIONSHIPS
- >18 mths
- growing cognitive and lang. skills allow for true relationship

19
Q

explain: strange situation exp.

A
  • mary ainsworth 1979, 1993
    1. free play
    2. introduction to stranger
    3. caregiver leaves infant w/ stranger
    4. caregiver returns
  • observes infant caregiver relationship
  • secure = baby cries when mom gone, relieved when mom returns
  • avoidant = baby not upset when mom leaves, ignores mom when she returns
    ⤷ “mad” that caregiver left
  • resistant = baby upset when mom leaves and stays upset/shows anger when she returns
  • disorganized = baby seems confused when they leave and return
20
Q

explain: cultural diff. in attachment

A
  • majority = secure
    ⤷ insecure attachments change w/ culture
  • german = value indep. so avoidant > resistant
  • japan = value interdep. -> don’t leave infants w/ strangers so resistant > avoidant
21
Q

explain: relation between infant attachment and interpersonal skills later in life

A
  • show correlation
  • overall shows relations
    ⤷ skills change w/ interactions but still correlated
  • secure = better friendships, higher self esteem, positive emo. health
  • insecure = beha. difficulties
22
Q

explain: effects of oxytocin and dopamine + HPA axis

A
  • oxytocin = supports maternal behaviours
  • dopamine = released in resp. to rewarding stim.
  • HPA axis = hypothalamus, pituitary gland, amygdala
    ⤷ activated in stressful sit. to release cortisol
    ⤷ early insecure attachment develops HPA axis -> less likely to be able to control emo.
23
Q

question: what about fathers in attachment?

A
  • attachment measures do not differ between mothers and fathers
  • fathers may engage in more physical play
  • mothers engage in more parenting
24
Q

question: how is trust developed?

A
  • infants dev. an expectation that caregiver will resp. and come to their rescue when they’re distressed
  • relates to learned helplessness
    ⤷ if think caregiver = unreliable -> impacts their internal working model of people and impacts later relationships
25
Q

explain: adult attachment

A
  • secure = describes childhood objectively, value impact of caregiver-child relationships
  • dismissive = sometimes deny value or cannot recall childhood experiences
    ⤷ often idealize caregivers
  • preoccupied adults = describe experiences emotionally, express anger/confusion regarding caregiver
26
Q

explain: attachment relation to smartphone use

A
  • avoidant attachment correlated w/ low self esteem and phone addiction
  • use smartphones to relax and lift moods
  • can grow to be attached to phone
    ⤷ separation anxiety