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Development
Pattern of continuity and change in human capabilities that occurs throughout life, involving both growth and decline
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Development involves multiple aspects and processes:
- Physical - biological nature, maturation
- Cognitive - thought, intelligence, language
- Socioemotional - relationships, emotions, personality
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Nature - biological inheritance, genes
- Genotype - genetic material
- Phenotype - observable characteristics
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Nurture
environmental and social experiences
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Experiences can alter the expression of genes
Phenotypes are altered based on experience as in phenylketonuria (PKU)
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Studying Development
- Longitudinal - recall from chapter 1
- Same participants at multiple points in time
- Cross-sectional - multiple participants in various age groups at the same point in time
- Twin studies
- Cohort effect - differences between individuals that may be due to historical or social experiences rather than just age
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Prenatal Development
- From conception to birth
- Germinal period - weeks 1 & 2
- Cell division, attachment to uterine wall
- Embryonic period - weeks 3 - 8
- Develop organs, spinal cord, heart beat
- Fetal period - months 2 - 9
- Organ function increases, fetus grows
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Infant Perception
- Studied in two main ways:
- Preferential looking - give an infant two objects to look at and check for a gaze preference
- =If the infant consistently gazes at one of the objects over the other we know they can distinguish them
- Habituation - repeatedly present an infant with the same object and wait for them to stop responding to it
- =If you present a different object and the infant doesn't respond then they can't tell the two objects apart
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Piaget
- Sensorimotor - Object Permanence
- Preoperational - Lack of conservation; Egocentrism
- Concrete-Operational - Conservation
- Formal-Operational - Deductive reasoning
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Socioemotional Development
Temperament - individual's behavioral style and characteristic way of responding
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Chess & Thomas:
- Easy - generally in a positive mood, establishes regular routines, adapts to new experiences
- Difficult - react negatively, cry often, irregular daily routines, slow to accept new experiences
- Slow-to-warm-up - low activity level, somewhat negative and inflexible, displays low intensity moods
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Alternate theory on temperament:
- Multiple dimensions that are continuous:
- Effortful control or self-regulation - controlling arousal, not being easily agitated
- Inhibition - being shy, showing distress in unfamiliar situations
- Negative affectivity - tending to be frustrated or sad
- Socioemotional Development
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Attachment - close emotional bond between an infant and its caregiver
- Harlow's monkeys
- Ainsworth's Strange Situation
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Parenting Styles
- Authoritarian: restrictive, punitive style in which the parent exhorts the child to follow the parent's directions and to value hard work and effort
- Authoritative: A parenting style that encourages the child to be independent but that still places limits and controls on behavior
- Neglectful: A parenting style characterized by a lack of parental involvement in the child's life
- Permissive: A parenting style characterized by the placement of few limits on the child's behavior
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Raising Moral Children
- Being warm and supportive rather than overly punishing and rigid
- When disciplining, using reasoning the child can understand
- Providing opportunities for the child to learn about others' perspectives and feelings
- Involving children in family decision making and in thinking about moral decisions
- Modeling moral behaviors and thinking, and providing children with opportunities to engage in such behaviors and thought
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Gender
- Sex is the biological organ assignment of male of female
- Gender is the social and psychological aspects of being male or female
- Gender roles - reflect the individual's expectations for how males or females should think, act, and feel
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Adolescence
- Puberty - a period of rapid skeletal and sexual maturation that occurs mainly in early adolescence
- =Begins around age 9 in girls and 11 in boys
- =Peaks around age 11 ? in girls and 13 ? in boys
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Adulthood
- Early adult - 20s & 30s
- Emerging adult - transitional period from adolescent to adulthood, spanning approximately 18 to 25 years of age
- =Identity exploration
- =Instability
- =Self-focus
- =Feeling -in between-
- =Age of possibilities
- Middle adult - 40s & 50s
- Late adult - 60 and beyond
- =Life expectancy in US: 80.4 for women, 75.2 for men
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Cognition in Adulthood
Crystallized intelligence - accumulated information and verbal skills
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Fluid intelligence - ability to reason abstractly
- =One study found crystallized higher in middle adult and fluid higher in early adult
- =A different study found different aspects of the intelligences peak at different ages in middle adulthood
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Wisdom - expert knowledge about the practical aspects of life
=Generally attributed to life experience
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