Inborn traits or characteristics inherited from the biological parents
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Environment
Totality of nonhereditary, or experiential influences on development
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Maturation
Unfolding of natural sequence of physical changes and behavioral patterns.
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Normative Influences
Biological or environmental events that affect many or most people in a society in similar ways and events that touch only certain individuals.
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Normative age-graded influences
A type of normative influence that are highly similar for a particular age group.
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Normative history-graded influences
A type of normative influence that refers to significant events that shape the behavior and attitudes of a historical generation.
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Cohort
A group of people born at about the same time.
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Sensitive periods
Times in development when a person is particularly open to certain kinds of experiences.
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Plasticity
Range of modifiability of performance.
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Physical development
Growth of the body and the brain, including patterns of change in sensory capacities, motor skills, and health.
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Cognitive development
Pattern of change in mental abilities, such as learning, attention, memory, language, thinking, reasoning, and creativity.
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Psychosocial development
Pattern of change in emotions, personality, and social relationships.
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Theory
Coherent set of logically related concepts that seeks to organize, explain, and predict data.
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Hypothesis
Possible explanations for phenomena, used to predict the outcome of the research.
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Mechanistic Model (Reactive)
A model that views human development as a series of predictable responses to stimuli.
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Organismic Model (Active)
Model that views human development as internally initiated by an active organism and as occurring in a sequence of qualitatively different stages.
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Quantitative change
Changes in number or amount, such as in height, weight, size of vocabulary, or frequency of communication.
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Qualitative change
Discontinuous changes in kind, structure, or organization.
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Psychoanalytic
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Learning
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Cognitive
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Contextual
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Evolutionary /.Sociobiological
Five major perspectives on human development.
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Freud's psychosexual theory
The theory that states that behavior is controlled by powerful unconscious urges.
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Erikson's psychosocial theory
Theory that states that personality is influenced by society and develops through a series of crises.
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Traditional learning theory / Behaviorism
Theory stating that people are responders and that environment controls behavior.
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Social learning theory
Theory stating that children learn in a social context by observing and imitating models.
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Piaget's cognitive-stage theory
Theory stating that there are qualitative changes in thought occur with development. Children are active initiators of development.
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Vygotsky's sociocultural theory
Theory stating social interaction is central to cognitive development.
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Information-processing theory
Theory stating that human beings are processors of symbols.
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Bronfenbrenner's ecological theory
Theory stating that development occurs through interaction between a developing person and five surrounding, interlocking contextual systems of influences.
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Evolutionary Psychology
Theory stating that human beings are the product of adaptive processes, which interact with the current environment to shape behavior.
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Crisis
A major psychosocial challenge that is particularly important at that time and will remain an issue to some degree throughout the rest of life.
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Psychoanalytic perspective
View of human development as shaped by unconscious forces that motivate human behavior.
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Learning perspective
View of human development that holds that changes in behavior result from experience or from adaptation to the environment.
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Classical conditioning
Learning based on associating a stimulus that does not elicit a response with another stimulus that does elicit the response.
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Operant conditioning
Learning controlled by the consequences of the organism's behavior.
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Reinforcement
The process by which a behavior is strengthened, increasing the likelihood that the behavior will be repeated.
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Punishment
The process by which a behavior is weakened, decreasing the likelihood of repetition.
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Reciprocal determinism
Badura's term for birectional forces that affect development.
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Observational Learning
Learning through watching the behavior of others.
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Organization
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Accommodation
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Equilibration
According to Piaget, cognitive growth occurs in three interrelated processes which are called?
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Organization
The tendency to create categories, by observing the characteristics that individual members of a category.
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Schemes
Organized pattern of thought and behavior used in particular situations.
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Adaptation
Piaget's term for adjustment to new information about the environment, achieved through the processes of assimilation and accommodation.
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Assimilation
Piaget's term for incorporation of new information into an existing cognitive structure.
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Accommodation
Piaget's term for changes in a cognitive structure to include new information.
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Equilibration
Piaget's term for the tendency to seek a stable balance among cognitive elements; achieved through assimilation and accommodation.
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Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)
Vygotsky's term for the difference between what a child can do alone and what the child can do with help.
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Scaffolding
Temporary support to help a child master a task.
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Contextual perspective
View of human development that sees the individual as inseparable from social context.
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Microsystem
It consists of the everyday environment of home, work, school, and neighborhood.
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Mesosystem
It is the interlocking influence of microsystems.
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Exosystem
It consists of interactions between a microsystem and an outside system or institution.
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Macrosystem
It consists of overarching cultural patterns, such as dominant beliefs, ideologies, and economic and political systems.
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Chronosystem
It represents dimension of time.
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Evolutionary/Sociobiological perspective
View of human development that focuses on evolutionary and biological bases of behavior.
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Fertilization
Union of the sperm cell and ovum from which the a zygote is produced.
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Zygote
One celled organism resulting from fertilization.
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Chromosomes
Coils of DNA that consist of genes.
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DNA
Chemical that carries inherited instructions for the development of all cellular forms of life.
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Genes
small segments of DNA located in definite positions on particular chromosomes.
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Autosomes
The 22 pairs of chromosomes not related to sexual expression.
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Sex chromosomes
Pair of chromosomes that determine sex.
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How many chromosomes do humans have?
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Alleles
Two or more alternative forms of a gene.
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Polygenic inheritance
A pattern of inheritance in which many genes influence a trait.
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Phenotype
Observable characteristics of a person.
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Genotype
Genetic makeup of an organism.
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Multifactorial transmission
The determination of traits by a combination of both genetic and environmental factors.
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Epigenesis
Mechanism that turns genes on or off and determines functions of body cells.
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Incomplete dominance
Pattern of inheritance in which a child receives two different alleles, resulting to a partial expression of a trait.
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Sex-linked inheritance
Pattern of inheritance in which certain characteristics carried on the X chromosome inherited from the mother are transmitted differently to her male and female offspring.
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Down syndrome
Trisomy 21
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Genetic Counseling
Clinical service that advises prospective parents of their probable risk of having children with hereditary defects.
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Behavioral genetics
Quantitative study of relative hereditary and environmental influences on behavior.
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Concordant
Term describing tendency of twins to share the same trait or disorder.
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Reaction range
Potential variability, depending on environmental conditions, in the expression of a hereditary trait.
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Canalization
Limitation on variance of expression of certain inherited characteristics.
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Genotype-environment interaction
The portion of phenotypic variation that results from the reactions of genetically different individuals to similar environmental conditions.
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Genotype-environment correlation
Tendency of certain genetic and environmental influences to reinforce each other; may be passive, reactive (evocative), or active. Also called genotype-environment covariance.
A type of genotype-environment correlation wherein the child has no control over it, and parents provide certain genes and environments for their children.
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Reactive or evocative correlations
A type of genotype-environment correlation wherein children with different genetic makeup's evoke different reactions from adults. Parents making arrangements to accommodate their child's talent or special interest
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Active correlations
A type of genotype-environment correlation wherein people seek out environments that match their genetic abilities.
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Niche-picking
Tendency to actively choose environments that complement our heredity.
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Nonshared environmental effect
The unique environment in which each child grows up, consisting of distinctive influences or influences that affect one child differently than another.
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Temperament
Characteristic disposition or style of approaching and reacting to situations.
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Critical Period
Specific time when a given event or its absence has a specific impact on development.
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Gestation
The period of development from conception to birth.
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Germinal
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Embryonic
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Fetal
Prenatal development takes place in three stages which are:
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Cephalocaudal principle
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Proximodistal principle
Two fundamental principles where development proceeds.
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Cephalocaudal principle
The principle that growth follows a pattern that begins with the head and upper body parts and then proceeds down to the rest of the body.
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Proximodistal principle
The principle that development proceeds from the center of the body outward.