Psychology
AP Psychology
Unit 6: Developmental Psychology
psychology
Developmental Psychology
nature
nurture
Nature versus nurture controversy
Maturation
Continuity versus discontinuity
Stability versus change
Longitudinal Studies
Cross-sectional
cohort
cohort effect
Cohort-sequential
Biographical or retrospective
Physical Development
periods
critical
Prenatal Development
development
Fetus
embryo
zygote
Teratogens
defects
AP PSYCHOLOGY
University/Undergrad
Nature versus nurture controversy
dealing with the extent to which heredity and the environment each influences behavior.
Maturation
biological growth processes that bring about orderly changes in behavior, thought, or physical growth, relatively unaffected by experience.
Continuity versus discontinuity
deals with the question of whether development is gradual, cumulative change from conception to death (continuity), or a sequence of distinct stages (discontinuity).
Stability versus change
deals with the issue of whether or not personality traits present during infancy endure throughout the lifespan.
Longitudinal Studies
follows the same group of people over a period from months to many years in order to evaluate changes in those individuals.
Cross-sectional study
researchers assess developmental changes with respect to a particular factor by evaluating different age groups of people at the same time. Cross-sectional studies can be invalid if a cohort, group of people in one age group, is significantly different in their experiences from other age groups, resulting in the cohort effect, differences in the experiences of each age group as a result of growing up in different historical times.
Cohort-sequential studies
cross-sectional groups are assessed at least two times over a span of months or years, rather than just once.
Biographical or retrospective studies
are case studies that investigate development in one person at a time.
Physical development
focuses on maturation and critical periods.
Critical period
is a time interval during which specific stimuli have a major effect on development that the stimuli do not produce at other times.
Fetus
the developing human organism from about 9 weeks after conception to birth.
Teratogens
Chemicals such as alcohol, drugs, tobacco ingredients, mercury, lead, cadmium, and other poisons or infectious agents, such as viruses, that cause birth defects
Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
is a cluster of abnormalities that occurs in babies of mothers who drink alcoholic beverages during pregnancy.
Neonates
or newborn babies, are equipped with basic reflexes that increase their chances of survival.
Rooting
is the neonate’s response of turning his or her head when touched on the cheek and then trying to put the stimulus into his or her mouth.
Sucking
is the automatic response of drawing in anything at the mouth.
Swallowing
is a contraction of throat muscles that enables food to pass into the esophagus without the neonate choking.
Grasping reflex
when the infant closes his or her fingers tightly around an object put in his or her hand.
Moro or startle reflex
in which a loud noise or sudden drop causes the neonate to automatically arch his or her back, fling his/her limbs out, and quickly retract them.
Habituation
is decreasing responsiveness with repeated presentation of the same stimulus.
Puberty
is sexual maturation, marked by the onset of the ability to reproduce.
Primary sex characteristics
reproductive organs (ovaries and testes) start producing mature sex cells, and external genitals (vulva and penis) grow.
Secondary sex characteristics
nonreproductive features associated with sexual maturity—such as widening of hips and breast development in females; growth of facial hair, muscular growth, development of the “Adam’s apple,” and deepening of the voice in males; and growth of pubic hair and underarm hair in both.
Stranger anxiety
fear of unfamiliar people, indicating that they can differentiate among people they know and people they don’t know.
Egocentrism
is consistent with a belief called animism, that all things are living just like him or her and the belief, called artificialism, that all objects are made by people.
Zone of proximal development (ZPD)
the range between the level at which a child can solve a problem working alone with difficulty and the level at which a child can solve a problem with the assistance of adults or more-skilled children.
Fluid intelligence
those abilities requiring speed or rapid learning—generally diminishes with aging
crystallized intelligence
learned knowledge and skills such as vocabulary—generally improves with age (at least through the 60s).
Lawrence Kohlberg
like Piaget, thought that moral thinking develops sequentially in stages as cognitive abilities develop.
Preconventional level of morality
in which they do the right thing to avoid punishment (stage 1) or to further their self-interests (stage 2).
Conventional level of morality
in which they follow rules to live up to the expectations of others, “good boy/nice girl” (stage 3), or to maintain “law and order” and do their duty (stage 4).
Postconventional level of morality
in which they evidence a social contract orientation that promotes the society’s welfare (stage 5) or evidence an ethical principle orientation that promotes justice and avoids self-condemnation (stage 6).
Carol Gilligan
found that women rarely reach the highest stages of morality, because they think more about the caring thing to do or following an ethic of care, rather than what the rules allow or following an ethic of justice.
Bonding
is the creation of a close emotional relationship between the mother (or parents) and baby shortly after birth.
Attachment
As the mother (or other caregiver) bonds with the infant, through frequent interactions, the infant gradually forms a close emotional relationship with his or her mother (or other caregivers)
Harry Harlow’s
experimental research with monkeys disproved that belief when he found that baby monkeys separated from their mothers preferred to spend time with and sought comfort from a soft cloth-covered substitute (surrogate) rather than a bare wire substitute with a feeding bottle.
Mary Ainsworth
studied attachment using a “strange situation” where a mother and baby play in an unfamiliar room, the baby interacts with the mother and an unfamiliar woman, the mother leaves the baby with the other woman briefly, the baby is left alone briefly, and then the mother returns to the room.
Temperament
or natural disposition to show a particular mood at a particular intensity for a specific period, affects his or her behavior.
Self-awareness
consciousness of oneself as a person, and social referencing, observing the behavior of others in social situations to obtain information or guidance, both develop between ages 1 and 2.
Diana Baumrind
studied how parenting styles affect the emotional growth of children.
Authoritarian
parents set up strict rules, expect children to follow them, and punish wrongdoing.
Authoritative
parents set limits but explain the reasons for rules with their children and make exceptions when appropriate.
Permissive
parents tend not to set firm guidelines, if they set any at all.
Uninvolved
parents make few demands, show low responsiveness, and communicate little with their children.
Erik Erikson
was an influential theorist partly because he examined development across the life span in a social context, rather than just during childhood, recognizing that we continue to grow beyond our teenage years, and our growth is influenced by others.
Daniel Levinson
described a midlife transition period at about age 40, seen by some as a last chance to achieve their goals.
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s
studies of death and dying have focused attention on the end of life, encouraging further studies of death and dying and the growth of the hospice movement that treats terminal patients and their families to alleviate physical and emotional pain.
Gender
is the sociocultural dimension of being biologically male or female.
Gender roles
are sets of expectations that prescribe how males and females should act, think, and feel.
Gender identity
is our sense of being male or female, usually linked to our anatomy and physiology.
Biopsychosocial model
ascribes gender, gender roles, and gender identity to the interaction of heredity (biology) and environment (including psychological and social-cultural factors).
Biological Perspective
attributes differences between the sexes to heredity.
Evolutionary Perspective
our behavioral tendencies prepare us to survive and reproduce.
Psychoanalytic Perspective
young girls learn to act feminine from their mothers, and young boys learn to act masculine from their fathers when they identify with their same-sex parent as a result of resolving either the Electra or Oedipal complex at about age 5.
Behavioral Perspective
social learning theory, children respond to rewards and punishments for their behavior, and they observe and imitate significant role models, such as their parents, to acquire their gender identity.
Cognitive Perspective
children actively engage in making meaning out of information they learn about gender.
Gender role stereotypes
which are broad categories that reflect our impressions and beliefs about males and females, have typically classified instrumental traits, such as self-reliance and leadership ability, as masculine and expressive traits, such as warmth and understanding, as feminine.
Androgyny
the presence of desirable masculine and feminine characteristics in the same individual.
Meta-analysis
of research on gender comparisons indicates that, for cognitive skills, the differences within either gender are larger than the differences between the two genders.
Stereotype threat
anxiety that influences members of a group concerned that their performance will confirm a negative stereotype.