Unit 4
Development
Study how we change physically, socially, cognitively, and morally over our lifetimes
- Nature VS Nurture:
- Are you who you are because of:
- Nature- the way you were born
- Nurture- the way you were raised
- Physical Development
-stomach and other organs formed
- at this time the baby, can hear, recognize sounds and respond to light
Teratogens
- Chemical agents can harm the prenatal environmenta
- Alcohol ,STDs,HIV
Healthy Newborns
- Turn their heads towards voices
- See 8 - 12 inches from their faces
Reflexes
- Inborn automatic response
Rooting (cheek)
- When a newborn is touched on the cheek, the infant will turn his or her head toward the source of stimulation
Grasping
- If an object is places into a baby's palm, the baby will try to grasp the object with his/her fingers
Moro (startle)
- When startled a baby will fling his/her limbs out and then quickly retract them
Babinski (foot)
- When a baby's foot is stroked, he or she will spread their toes
Maturation
- Physical growth processes that enable orderly changes in behavior, regardless of the environment
Motor Development
- First learn to roll over, sit up unsupported, crawl, walk, etc
Cognition
- All mental activities associated with thinking, knowing and remembering.
Schemas
- The way we interpret the world around us (concepts)
Assimilation
- Incorporating new experiences into existing schemas
Accommodation
- Changing an existing schema to adapt new informtion
4 Stages of Cognitive Development -Jean Pieget
1: Sensorimotor Stage (0-2 yrs)
- experience the world through our senses
- object permanance: develops around 6-8 months of age
2: Preoperational Stage (2-6 or 7 yrs)
- Begin to use language to represent objects and ideas, think in symbols
- Non logical, "magical thinking"
- Egocentric: early in this stage they cannot look at the world through anyone's eyes but their own
Conservation
- Refers to the idea that a quantity remains the same despite changes in appearance and is part of logical thinking
3: Concrete Operational Stage (7-11 yrs)
- Can demonstrate concept of conservation
- Learn to think logically
- Understanding of reversibility, of awareness that action
4: Formal Operational Stage (12+ yrs)
- Abstract reasoning
- Reasoning with metaphore and analogies
Social Development
- Up until a year, infants do not mind strangers
- At about a year, infants develop stranger anxiety
Attachment
- Most important social construct an infant must develop a bond with caregiver
- Konrad Lorenz discovered that some animals form attachment through imprinting.
Origins of Attachment
- Harry Harlow and his monkeys
- Showed that monkeys needed touch or body contact to form attachment
- Deprived of touch can led to trouble forming attachment when they are older
Responsive Parenting
- Mary Ainsworths "Strange Situation" study
- Three types:
1 -Secure Attachment
- Children show some distress when parent leaves, seek contact at the reunion, explore when parent gone, play and greet when parent present
2 - Stranger Anxiety
- Fear of strangers that infants display
- beginning about 8 months of age
3-Seperation Anxiety
- Distress the infant shows when object of attachment leaves
- Peaks between 14 and 18 months
Parenting Styles
1-Authoritarian Parents
- impose rules and expect obediance
2-Permissive Parents
- parents submit to childrens desires
3-Authoritative Parents
- both the parent and the child compromis
Sigmund Freud
- We all have a libido
- Our libido travels to diff areas of our body throughout our development
- If we become preoccupied with any one area, Freud said we have become fixated on it
- Together Freud called these stages our Psychosexual Stages of Development
Oral Stage (0-1)
- Seek pleasure through the mouth
- Psychological task: weaning
Anal Stage (1-3)
- Psychological task: toilet training
- Libido is focused on controlling waste and expelling waste
Phallic Stage (3-6)
- Children first recognize their gender
- Psychological task: identify with the same sex parent
- Causes conflict in families with the Oedipus and Electra Complexes
Latency (6-11)
- Libido is hidden
- Cooties stage
Genital Stage (11 and up)
- Libido is focused on their genitals
- Experience sexual feelings toward others
Adolescence
- transition period from childhood to adulthood
Puberty
- Period of sexual maturation during which a person becomes capable of reproducing
Primary Sexual Characteristics
- Body structures that make reproduction possible
Secondary Sexual Characteristics
- None reproductive sexual characteristics
Adulthood
- All physical abilities peak by our mid twenties
Physical Milestones
- Menopause: the natural ending of a woman's ability to reproduce
Types of Intelligence
Crystallized
- accumulated knowledge
- increases with age
Fluid
- ability to solve problems quickly and think abstractly
- peaks in 20s and decreases over time
Alzheimer's Disease
- A progressive and irreversible brain disorder characterized by gradual deterioration of memory, language and physical functioning
- Caused by deterioration of neurons that produce the transmitter acetylcholine
Life Expectancy
- Keeps increasing: now about 75
- Women outlive men by about 4 years
Death
- Elizabeth Kubler-Ross's Stages of Death & Grief
1. Denial
2. Anger
3. Bargaining
4. Depression
5. Acceptance
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