Child Development: A Cultural Approach - Infancy
Growth and Change in Infancy
Growth Patterns
- Objective 5.1: Describe changes in weight and height during the first year and explain the two basic principles of physical growth.
- Infants experience rapid growth during their first year.
- Weight:
- Doubles in the first 5 months.
- Triples by the end of the first year.
- Height:
- Grows unevenly compared to weight.
- Two fundamental principles of physical growth:
- Cephalocaudal principle: Growth progresses from head to tail.
- Proximodistal principle: Growth proceeds from near to far (center of the body outwards).
Brain Development
- Objective 5.2: Identify the key parts of the brain and describe how the brain changes in the first few years of life.
- Most neurons develop before birth.
- Brain size:
- At birth, it's about 25% of an adult's brain.
- Reaches 70% by age 2.
- Brain growth is attributed to:
- Synaptic exuberance: Dendritic connections multiply.
- Myelination: Axons become encased in a myelin sheath.
- Efficiency increases through synaptic pruning.
- Brain divided into three major regions:
- Hindbrain.
- Midbrain.
- Forebrain
- Limbic System: Hypothalamus, Thalamus, Hippocampus
- Cerebral Cortex: Lobes
- Hindbrain and midbrain mature early, controlling basic biological functions.
- Cerebral cortex:
- Distinctly human part of the brain.
- Divided into two hemispheres (lateralization).
- Each hemisphere has four lobes with distinct functions:
- Occipital lobes.
- Temporal lobes.
- Parietal lobes.
- Frontal lobes.
- Infant brain plasticity:
- Highly responsive and adaptable to environmental influences.
- Vulnerable to environmental deprivation, which can have lasting effects.
- Romanian adoptions example: Cognitive abilities were affected by the age of adoption.
Sleep Changes
- Objective 5.3: Describe how sleep changes in the course of the first year, and evaluate the risk factors for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), including the research evidence regarding cosleeping.
- Infants typically sleep 16 to 17 hours a day.
- Around 3 to 4 months, they may sleep 6 to 7 hours at night.
- Cultural patterns influence sleep duration. For example:
- American infants: 14 hours.
- Kipsigis infants: 12 hours.
- Dutch infants: 16 hours.
- Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS):
- Unexplained death within the first year, without any apparent illness or disorder.
- Infants aged 1 to 4 months are at the highest risk.
- Involves three factors: a critical developmental period, a vulnerable infant, and environmental risks.
- Cosleeping:
- Western countries often advise against it due to concerns about dependence, emotional health, and SIDS risk.
- Developing countries often view it as normal and promoting parent-child attachment.
- Considered a custom complex, reflecting underlying cultural beliefs.
Infant Health
Nutritional Needs
- Objective 5.4: Summarize how infants’ nutritional needs change during the first year of life, and identify the reasons for and consequences of malnutrition in infancy.
- Breast milk is essential, providing a high-fat diet necessary for infants.
- Solid foods are generally introduced around 4 to 6 months.
- Cultural variations exist in the types of food introduced:
- Western cultures: Rice cereal and easily digestible foods.
- Traditional cultures: Mashed, prechewed, or pureed foods.
- Malnutrition in infancy:
- Rates are declining in developing countries but remain higher than in developed countries.
- Can be severe and have long-lasting effects.
- May occur due to a mother's inability or unwillingness to breastfeed.
- Increased risk of marasmus, a disease characterized by body wasting due to nutrient deficiency.
Infant Mortality
- Objective 5.5: List the major causes of infant mortality and name some cultural approaches to protecting infants.
- Most infant mortality happens in the first month of life.
- Rates are significantly higher in developing countries.
- Main causes after the first month but within the first year:
- Malnutrition.
- Disease.
- Malaria.
- Diarrhea leading to dehydration.
- Diarrhea can be treated with oral rehydration therapy (ORT), which has reduced infant deaths.
- Vaccines have eliminated various diseases, offering immunization.
- Cultural beliefs and practices to protect infants:
- Traditional cultures often have practices influenced by awareness of infant vulnerabilities.
- These practices help infants avoid harm, even without understanding the physiological causes of illness or medical remedies.
- Magical practices may still be used where knowledge is limited.
Motor and Sensory Development
Motor Development
- Objective 5.6: Summarize the major changes in gross and fine motor development during infancy.
- Gross motor development:
- Involves whole-body movements like crawling.
- Skills develop in a sequence, with variations in the timing of milestones.
- Sequence is mainly ontogenetic (genetic) with environmental influences.
- Cultural variations in stimulating motor skills, but early stimulation doesn't guarantee long-term gains.
- Fine motor development:
- Infants improve at grasping and exploring objects during the first year.
Sensory Development
- Objective 5.7: Specify when and how infants develop depth perception and intermodal perception.
- Depth perception:
- Binocular vision develops at 2 to 3 months.
- Important for mobility.
- Visual cliff experiments are used to understand when infants learn depth perception.
- Bidirectional relationship between perceptual and motor development.
- Intermodal perception:
- Integration and coordination of sensory information.
- Progresses in the first year.
- Helps infants learn about their physical and social world.
Theories and Assessments of Cognitive Development
Piaget’s Stage Theory of Cognitive Development
- Objective 5.8: Describe the sensorimotor stage and explain how object permanence develops over the course of the first year.
- Sensorimotor stage:
- Occurs during the first 2 years of life.
- Infants learn to coordinate sensory and motor activities.
- Progress from reflex behavior to intentional actions.
- Assimilation: Fitting new information into existing schemes.
- Accommodation: Changing schemes to adapt to new information.
- Object permanence:
- Understanding that objects continue to exist even when not perceived.
- Infants initially have little understanding of this.
- Develops around 8 to 12 months.
- A-not-B error: Believing one's own action causes an object to appear.
- Motor Coordination and Object Permanence
- Baillargeon tested infant abilities using the violation of expectations method.
- Showed that young infants perceive objects as permanent and whole
- Supported in other cultures.
- Objective 5.9: Summarize information-processing approaches and describe how attention and memory change during infancy.
- Information-processing approaches view cognitive change as continuous.
- Different components of thinking operate simultaneously.
- Researchers study attention, memory, and executive function.
- Attention:
- Focus selectively on information.
- Studied using habituation and dishabituation.
- Infants improve at processing stimuli to habituate faster.
- Joint attention emerges at the end of the first year.
- Memory:
- Short-term and long-term memory improve.
- Object permanence tasks demonstrate infants' ability to remember hidden object locations.
- Difference between recognition memory and recall memory.
Assessing Infant Development
- Objective 5.10: Outline the Bayley Scales of Infant Development (BSID) and explain how habituation assessments are used to predict later intelligence.
- Bayley Scales of Infant Development (BSID):
- Measures development from 3 months to 3.5 years.
- Three main scales: Cognitive, Language, Motor.
- Developmental quotient (DQ) is not predictive of later IQ but can be used as a screening tool.
- Information-Processing Approaches to Infant Assessment
- Use habituation to asses intelligence
- Infants with short habituation time process quicker
- Longitudinal studies show a connection between habituation time and IQ and higher achievement
The Beginnings of Language
First Sounds and Words
- Objective 5.11: Describe the course of language development over the first year of life.
- Language Development:
- Cooing at 2 months.
- Babbling at 4 to 6 months.
- Gestures used to communicate at 8 to 10 months.
- First words spoken at 12 months.
- Language comprehension exceeds language production.
Infant-Directed (ID) Speech
- Objective 5.12: Compare how cultures vary in their stimulation of language development.
- Infant-Directed (ID) Speech:
- Higher pitch with simplified grammar.
- Exaggerated intonation and repeated phrases.
- Infants prefer it due to its emotional charge.
- Common in many Western cultures.
Temperament
Conceptualizing Temperament
- Objective 5.13: Define infant temperament and name its main dimensions.
- Temperament:
- Innate responses to physical and social environments.
- Thomas and Chess classified babies into three categories: easy, difficult, slow to warm up.
- Temperament in infancy can predict later development.
- Current research adds self-regulation or sociability.
- Two Conceptions of Infant Temperament
- (Thomas and Chess): Activity level, attention span, intensity of reaction, rhythmicity, distractibility, approach/withdrawal, adaptability, threshold of responsiveness, quality of mood
- (Rothbart): Activity level, attention span/persistence, fearful distress, irritable distress, positive affect, self-regulation
Goodness-of-Fit
- Objective 5.14: Explain how the idea of goodness-of-fit pertains to temperament on both a family level and a cultural level.
- Goodness-of-Fit:
- A good fit between a child's temperament and environmental demands.
- Parents need to be aware of temperaments and respond accordingly.
- Cultures value different traits, leading to cultural goodness-of-fit.
Infants’ Emotions
Primary Emotions
- Objective 5.15: Identify the primary emotions and describe how they develop during infancy.
- Primary Emotions:
- Basic emotions shared with other animals.
- Secondary emotions (socio-moral emotions) develop later.
- Distress, interest, and pleasure appear in the first weeks of life.
- Evolve into anger, sadness, fear, surprise, and happiness.
- Social smiling depends on caregivers.
Infants’ Emotional Perceptions
- Objective 5.16: Describe infants’ emotional perceptions and how their emotions become increasingly social over the first year.
- Perceiving Emotions:
- Crying in response to hearing another cry is emotional contagion.
- Infants perceive emotions by hearing before seeing.
- Still-face paradigm: Infants learn to expect certain emotional reactions.
- Ability to match auditory and visual emotions emerges.
- Infants gradually show social referencing.
The Social World of the Infant
Cultural Themes of Infant Social Life
- Objective 5.17: List the main features of infants’ social worlds across cultures.
- Infants’ Social World:
- Key themes across cultures:
- Infants almost constantly with mothers in early months.
- After 6 months, daily care is often done by older girls.
- Infants are around many other people during the day.
- Infants are held or carried almost constantly.
- Fathers are often remote or absent during the first year.
- Infants develop well socially in various cultural contexts.
The Foundation of Social Development: Two Theories
- Objective 5.18: Compare and contrast the two major theories of infants’ social development.
- Trust versus Mistrust:
- Erikson’s first stage of development.
- Centers around emotional and social bonds, not biological bonds.
- Developing trust in infancy provides a foundation for future social development.
- Attachment Theory:
- Bowlby emphasized the importance of early quality relationships.
- Crucial for the primary caregiver to be sensitive and responsive.
- Babies learn that others can be trusted in social relationships.
- Has an evolutionary basis and is supported by research on mother-offspring relationships in animal species.