Exam 2 Study Guide - Child Psych
Sensation and Perception
Sensation: The processing of basic information from the world through the sense organs (eyes, ears, skin, etc.)
Perception: The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information about objects, events, and the world around us
Vision and Visual Acuity
The least matured sense of a newborn
Improves rapidly in first months
Visual Acuity: Determine how sharply or clearly infants can see
Adults and Children: Eye Charts
Infants: Pattern Distinction
Limited at birth
What an adult can see at 600 ft, and infant can see at 20 ft.
Adult level by 6 months
Cone Cells: The light senstive neurons that are highly concentrated in the fovea
Involved in seeing fine details and color
Spaced 4 times farther apart than adults
Infants prefer unique hues like blue
Do not see color for the first few months
Fovea: The central region of the retina
Infants foveas catch 2% of light, compared to 65% for adults
Retina: Light-senstive layer of tissue at the back of the eyeball
Image comes through and focuses on the retina
Created the images that you see
Have 20/120 vision at birth
Preferential Looking Technique
Two different visual stimuli are displayed side by side. If an infant looks longer at one of the two stimuli, the researcher can infer that (a) the baby can discriminate between them, and (b) the infant prefers one over the other
Established by Fantz
Modern versions use automatic eye trackers
Use a camera that mesaures eye movements via infrared light reflection
Head-mounted infant-eye trackers that show where infants are looking as they move their eyes freely around the room.
Pattern Perception
Newborns perfer patterns over plain stimuli due to inability to see small features
High contrast
Ex: Black and white checkerboard
Older infants prefer more complex patterns
Contrast sensitivity: Infants can detect a pattern only when it is composed of highly contrasting elements.
Object Perception
Perceptual Constancy: The perception of objects as being of constant size, shape, color, etc., despite phsycial differences in the retinal image of the object
Evident in the first week of life
Not dependent on experience
Ex: A door opening and closing
Object Segregation: The identification of seperate obhects in a visual array
Experience with specific objects helps infants understand their physcial properties
Common Movement: It refers to the perception of objects moving together in the same direction, speed, or pattern, aiding in the organization and recognition of objects in the visual field.
Ex: A box going over a line, do they focus on the full line or the two seperate lines?
Depth Perception
Depth Perception: The ability to judge distance of objects from one another and ourselves
Depth Cues Used by Infants
Optical Expansion: The visual image of an object increases in size as the object comes toward us, occluding more in the background
By 1 Month
Binocular Disparity: The closer the object, the more diiferent retinal images of it from the two eyes will be
Stereopsis: The process by which the visual cortex combines the different neural signals from each eye to create depth perception
By 4 Months
Monocular/Pictorial Cues: The perceptual cues of depth that can be achieved by one eye alone (e.g., relative size, interposition)
By 6-7 Months
Visual Cliff Study
Based on Visual Cliff Apparatus
It involved a glass-covered platform with a shallow and deep side to see if infants would perceive the drop and hesitate to cross, indicating depth perception development.
Showed depth perception develops within 1-2 months after baby begins to crawl
Hearing
Most developed sense at birth
Auditory Localization: the perception fo the spatial location of a sound source
Newborns turn towards a sound
Improves with growth
Infants can discriminate sounds
Volume
Duration
Pitch
Infants prefer listening to “baby talk,” their mothers voice over unfamiliar adults, and their native language
Lose senitivity to sounds not needed for home language
Taste & Smell
Innate responses in infancy
Sweet taste (preferred) → relaxed facial muscles
Sour taste → pursed lips
Sweet vs. Rotten smell → Happy vs. Unhappy expression
Prenatal Experiences
Early exposure to bitter flavors increase likelihood of preference for those flavors
Prenatal exposure to garlic → more likely to like garlic
Newborn Preferences
Prefer smell of mother’s breast milk
Can distinguish it
Intermodal Perception
Intermodal Perception: The combining of information from two or more sensory systems
Ex: Sucking on a pacifier without seeing it and able to recognize it once visible
Ex: Sight and sound of a ball
Ex: Matching Facial Expression with Voice
Helps with perception
Easier for infants to detect changes in stimulation that occur at the same time in two modalities
Piaget Core Principals
Constructivist Approach: Children as constructing knowledge for themselves in response to their experiences (“Little Scientists”)
Generating hypotheses
Performing experiences
Drawing conclusions
Schemas: Organized unit of knowledge used to understand and respond to situations
Become more “cognitive” over time
Considered a set of linked mental representations
Mental Representations: Internal depictions of information the mind can manipulate
Adaption
Assimilation: The process by which people incorporate incoming information into concepts they already understand
Ex: Calling a zebra a horse
Accommodation: The process by which people improve their current understanding in response to new experiences
Ex: Creating a new schema for zebras
Equilibration: The process by which people balance assimilation and accomodation to create stable understanding
Three Phases
People are satisfied with their understanding of a particular phenomenon
New information leads them to perceive that their understanding is inadequate
Develop a more sophisticated understanding
Continuity and Discontinutiy
Piaget’s stages are discontinuous
Qualitative Change
Moral judgements change based on age
Invariant Sequence: Everyone progresses throught the stages in the same order without skipping any of them
Broad Applicability
Characteristic of each stage influences children’s thinking across diverse topics and contexts
Sensorimotor Stage
Birth to 2 years old
Thinking via senses and motor skills
Substages
Basic Reflex Activity: Proficient in innate reflexes
Birth - 1 month
Primary Circular Reactions: Infants produce repetitive behavioris focused on own body
1 month - 4 months
Ex: Sucking thumb
Pleasureable response to chace event → repeated occurrence
Lacks object permanence, but begin to search for objects the disappear from sight
Secondary Circular Reactions: Repetitive behaviors now focused on external objects
4 - 8 months
Behaviors still not intentional
Can imitate familiar, but not novel, behaviors
Coordination of Secondary Circular Reactions: Schemas can be comined into complex sequences
8 - 12 months
Ex: hitting + reaching + grasping
Behavior intentional and goal-directed
Gain object permance but show A-not-B error
Teritary Circular Reactions: Toddlers experiment with external objects
12 - 18 months
Use of actions not previously linked to the objects variation → new outcomes
Improved problem solving
Display accurate A-B Search
Mental Representation: Reach ability to “think” befoer you act
18-24 months
Arrival at solutions suddently suggests mental representation of different actions
Deffered imitation appears
Leads to development of make-believe play
Object permanence: The understanding that objects continue to exist even when they are not visible
A-not-B Error: a phenomenon observed in infants where they continue to search for an object in the initial hiding place (A) even after seeing it being hidden in a new location (B)
Deferred Imitation: the ability to observe and remember another person's actions and then imitate those actions after a delay
Preoperational Stage
2 - 7 Years
Large increase in mental representations
Make believe play
Reinforces Schemas
Kids become detached from real-life conditions
Kids become less self-centered
Involves more complex cominations of schemas
Symbolic Representation: The use of one object, word, or thought to stand for another.
Ex: 5-year olds will play games involving pirates while wearing a patch over one eye
DeLoache’s Snoopy Study
Hiding a snoopy doll in a scale model of a room and then hiding a bigger snoopy doll in an identical room
Older kids could find it, younger kids couldn’t
Demostrates dual representation
Dual Representation: Viewing a symbolic object as an object and a symbol
Limitations
Egocentrism: Perceiving the world solely from one’s own point of view
Three Mountains Task - Kids younger than 4 could not imagine what the researcher was seeing from the other side of the mountain, so they assume they see from their own point of view
Pencils/Smarties Task - Kids were shown a box of smarties and asked what they believed was in the box. The kids said it would be smarties. But, when they were shown that the box of smarties had pencils in the box, the kids said they always believed pencils were in the box and others would think the same way.
Animistic Thinking: The belief that inanimate objects have lifelike qualities
Corresponds with magical thinking of preschoolers
Only applies with objects that move in real life
Lack of Conservation: Certain physical characteristics of objects remain the same, despite changes in outward appearence
Centration: Focus on a single, perceptually striking feature of an object or event to exclusion of other relevant features
Irreversibility: Inability to go through a series of steps in a problem and then mentally revesre direction and return to starting point
Concrete Operational Stage
7 - 11 Years
Characterized by more logical, fexible, and organized though and abilities
Conservation
Classification: classifying objects into groups and subgroups
Decentration: the ability to pay attention to multiple attributes of an object or situation rather than being locked into attending to only a single attribute
Spatial Reasoning
Reversibility
Seriation: The ability to order items along a quantitative dimesion
Transitive interference issues
Transitive interference: the ability to seriate mentally
Formal Operation Stage
11 Years Old and Beyond
Not everyone reaches this
Characterized by abstract, scientific thinking
Hypothetical Reasoning: hypothetical "what-if" situations that are not always rooted in reality
Metacognition: the awareness and understanding of one's own thought processes.
Cognitive Distortions: irrational thoughts that influence our emotions and behaviors. They are inaccurate or exaggerated beliefs about ourselves, others, or the world.
Imaginary Audience: Believing you are the focus
Personal Fable: Inflated opinion of self-importance
Critisms of Piaget
The stage model depicts children’s thinking as being more consistent than it is
Infants and young children are more cognitively competent than piaget recognized
Understates the contribution of the social world to cognitive development
Vague about mechansisms that give rise to children’s thinking and produce cogntitve growth
Information Processing Theory
Information Processing Theory: Children’s cognitive growth occurs continuously from gradually surmounting processing limitations through:
Exanding amount of information they can process at a time
Increasing processing speeds
Acquiring new strategies and knowledge
Thinking is a activity that occurs over time, with numerous mental operations underlying a single behavior
Task Analysis: identification of goals needed to perform the task, obstacles that prevent immediate realization of the goals, prior knowledge relevant to achieving the goals, and potential strategies for reaching the desired outcome
Computer Metaphor
Input devices (sensory memory) → Processor/RAM (working memory) ⬆ ⬇ Hard Drive Storage (long term memory) → Output (response to stimuli)
Store Model: Assumes we hold or store information in three parts of the mental system for processing
Sensory Memory: Represents sensory information
Working Memory: Actively attending to, gathering, maintaining, storing, and processing information is limited in both capacity (amount of information that can be stored) and length of time information can be retained.
Happnens in less than a second
Capacity and duration increases greatly during infancy and adolescence
Long Term Memory: Knowledge that people accumulate over their lifetime
Factual Knowledge
Knowing who one the Super Bowl last year or the capitals of different countries
Conceptual Knowledge
The concepts of justice and equality
Procedural Knowledge
Knowing how to shoot a basketball or play a specific video game)
Attitudes
Likes and dislikes regarding food or politics
Unlimited amount of information for unlimited periods of time
Encoding: The representation in memory of specific features of objects and events
Encode info that draws attention or they consider important
Faliure to encode means it will not be remembered later
Role of the Myelin: Increasing the number of axons covered with myelin means faster processing speed and more reliable transmissions of electrical impulses in the brain
Memory
Selective Attention: Intentionally focusing on the information most relevant to the current goal
Rehearsal: Repeating information to yourself
Organization: Grouping related items
Elaboration: creating relationships between two items not in same category
Retroactive Interference: The tendency of later learning to hinder the memory of previously learned material
Control Deficiencies: Kids know strategies but don’t use them consistently
Utilization Deficiencies: Kids use strategies but don’t benefit from them
Memory Retrival
Recognition: Noticing a stimulus is identical or similar to one previously experienced
Easier than recall
Young infants do it too
Recall: Generating a mental representation of an absent stimulus
More difficult than recognition
Can appear at one year
2 Year (1-2 items), 4 (3-4 items)
Overlapping Waves Theory: Individual children usually use a variety of approaches to solve such problems
Ex: Examining 5-year-olds’ reasoning on repeated trials of the conservation-of-number problem reveals that most children use at least three different strategies
Gist Memory: Focusing on details but sometimes lacking the ability to get the core kernel of what happened
Farmer Brown Study: Preschoolers and 2nd Graders were given the sentence “Farmer Brown owns three dogs, five sheep, seven chickens, nine horses, and 11 cows”
First Test (Vertaim Test) - Asked “How many cows farmer brown owns: either 11 or 9”
Second Test (Gist Test) - Asked “Does Farmer Brown have more cows or horses”
Showed 2nd graders had better verbatim and gist results but were better overall at gist memory and preschoolers were better at verbatim
Core Knowledge
Views kids as having innate knowledge in domains of special evolutionary importance
Domain-specific Understanding: Knowledge systems (“core domains of thought”) that appear early in life and allow infants to grasp new information
Allows children to distinguish between living and nonliving things
Theory of mind: the ability to attribute mental states—beliefs, intents, desires—to oneself and others, and to understand that others have beliefs, desires, intentions, and perspectives that are different from one's own.
IDing faces
Naïve theorists: Children develop theories of objects (physics), people (psychology) and knowledge of plants and animals (biology)
Physical Knowledge
Solid Objects can’t move through another
Size comparisons
Gravity
Numerical Knowledge
Infants can do simple math up to three
Controversial
Violation of Expectation: Infants will stare at events that would not be physically possible.
This shows they know basic core knowledge principals
René Bierijan (?) Study
Object Solidity
Open-Countainer (expected event)
Closed-Container condition (unexpected event)
Infants as young as 3 ½ months looked at the unexpected
Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory
Cognitive Development takes place through direct interaction
“Teaching is only effective when the road points toward the road for development” - Vygotsky
Language leads to cognitve change
Piagetian View: Egocentric Speech
Decreased by agruments with peers
Replaced by social speech (adapting)
Rejected by Vygotsky
Vygotsky’s View: Private Speech
Talking through problem solving out loud
Used for guidance and is a foundation for all higher cognitive processes
Becomes silent, inner speech as kids age
Age 4 to 6 Years
Guided participation: a process in which more knowledgable individuals organize activites in ways that allow less knowledgable people to perform the activity at a higher level than they could manage on their own.
Ex: a child’s mom holds one part of a toy so that the child can screw the two other parts together
Zone of Proximal Development: Tasks a child cannot do alone but can learn to do with help
Furthest Layer: Learner cannot do
Middle Layer: Learner can do with guidance
Innermost Layer: Learner can do unaided
Intersubjectivity: Two participants begin a task with different understandings but arrive at a shared understang
Creates a common ground
3-5 years do this: I think ___. What do you think?”
Joint Attention: Social partners focus on the same external object
Involved in language development
Ex: parents points at and names objects
Kids with ASD may struggle with this
Social Scaffolding: adults and others with greater expertise organize the physical and social environment to help children learn.
Learning aided by providing a temporary framework that supprts children’s thinking at a higher level than children could manage on their own
Framework includes:
Choosing a task beyond kid’s level but able to do with help
Demostrating how the task can be done
Helping learners accomplish the most difficult parts
Kids incorporate parent instruction into private speech
Reciprocal Teaching: Collaborative group effort leading dialog
Cognitive Strategies
Questioning
Summarizing
Clarifying
Predicting
Active teahcer involvement gradually declines
Cooperative Learning: Small groups of classmates work toward common goals
Easier in collectivist cultures
Comprehension and Production
Comprehension: Understanding what others say, sign, or right
Precedes Production
Production: Speaking, signing, or writing
Components of Langauage
Phonology: Rules of governing structure sequence of units of sounds
i. e. phonemes
Semantics: What concepts are expressed in words and word combos
e. g. vocabulary
Pragmatics: Rules for engaging in appropriate and effective communication
Generativity
Generativity: Using finite set of words and our knowledge of the systematic ways in which those words can be combines, we can generate an infinate number of sentences
We know that the plural of the fake word “wug” is “wugs”
Very complex for young learners
Nativist Perspective and Noam Chomsky
Nativist Perspective: Developed by Noam Chomsky, the nativist perspective says that children assume much responsibility for learning a language
Language is a human accomplishment
Language Acquistion Device (LAD): Innate sustem that allows children to combine words (with consistent grammar) and understand meaning
Universal Grammar: Proposed set of highly abstract, unconscious rules governing grammar in all human languages
Hard-wired and within the LAD
Argues all languages have similar underlying structures despite surface differences
Language is mastered spontaneously with limited exposure
Language Training is unnecessary
Nativist Perspective Support
Does not really work with other animals
Kanzi, along with other primates and some dolphins, can learn basic grammar but cannot use complex syntax
Lacks pragmatic knowledge (Social Communication Skills)
It took Kanzi years to be able to learn, kids learn much faster
There are structures in the brain that are linked to language
Broca’s Area (Production)
Wernicke’s Area (Comprehension)
Proved that the brain has critical periods and sensitive periods for language development
Lennenberg proposed brain development must happen during brain lateralization
Genie was not taught language early in life, so she was unable to fully be able to speak properly
Nativist Perspective Critisms
Genie: If left hemisphere is damaged, right hemisphere can compensate except for grammar
Doubts about universal grammar
Kids don’t completly master grammar but learning and discovery continue to shape it
Ignores social factors
Belived that language prerequisites are the human brain and experience
Interactionist Perspective
Language Acquistiton Support System (LAS): Views parents as facilitators of language acquisition with several different strategies
Ex: Playing Games with a Child
Infant Directed Speech: Speaking with greater pitch variability, slower speech, shorter utterances, more word repetition, and mroe questions.
AKA Motherese or Parentese
Warm and affectionate tone, higgh pitch, clearer enunciation, slower speech, and exaggerated facial expressions captures a child’s attention but does not overwhelm them.
Infants prefer this but may respond less appropriately
Seen in other languages (including Sign Language), but not universal
Shares Important Information with infants
Lowering pitch meand disproval
Draws attention to speech
Expansion: Imitating and expanding a child’s statement
Ex: A child says “Daddy Juice” and the adult repeats the phrase but words it correctly “Daddy drinks juice”
Recast: Rendering incomplete sentences into more complex grammatical form
Ex: Child says “Doggy eat” and adult asks “what is the doggy eating”
Increases rate of language development
Prelinguistic Development
Prosody: Characteristic rhythm, tempo, cadence, melody, etc. with ehich a language is spoken
Responsible for why languge sounds different from each other
Infants sensitive to it
May help with learning a child’s native language faster
Categorical Perception: The perception of speech sounds as belonging to discrete categories
Newborns capable
By 7-10 months: can detect syllables
By 12 months: Stop attending to sounds not useful in natice tongue
Voice Onset Time (VOT): the lenght of time between when air passes through the lips and when the vocal cords start vibrating
Young infants draw sharp disticntions between speech sounds
Word Segmentation: Figuring out where the spoken words start and end
As Young as 7 Months Old
8 Mo ths of Age: English-learning infants expect stressed syllables to begin words and can use this information to pull words out of fluent speech
Distributional Properties: Sounds that are part of the same word are more likely to occur together than others
Infants can discriminte between the words and the sequences that were not words.
Days after birth and on, use predictable sound patterns to fish words out of the passing stream of speech
Can understand their name as young as 4 ½ months
Cooing: Drawn-out vowel sounds
“oooo” “aaahhh”
Emerges between 6-8 weeks
Helps infant gain motor control over vocalizations
Babbling: Repeating strings of sounds comprising a constant followed by a vowel
“Babababa”
Emerges around 4 Months
Deaf infants babble with their hands
Will eventually become first words
Gradually takes on sounds, rhythm, and intonational patterns of the language infants hear or see daily
Eye Gaze
At 4 months - Infants begin to gaze where adults look
Intersubjectivity and Joint Attention
Gestures
Protodeclarative: Used to make statement about an object
Holds an object, Points While Looking at Parent
Protoimperative: Used to get someone to do something they want
Reaching, making sounds at the same time
Phonological Development
Developing ability to:
Attend to sound sequences
Produce sounds
Combine sounds in understandable words and phrases
Phonemes: Individual unit of speech sound
/p/, /b/, <sh>, <ch>
Different languages have different meanings
Early Phase (10-15 Months)
First words during this time, but often mispronounced
Ex: Banana becomes “nana” or brother becomes “bubba”
First words are often common nouns
Some first words common across langugues (bye-bye, night-night, mine, all gone)
Toddlers
Developmental pattern of strategies starts around age 2
First Stage: Minimal Words are produces
Focus on stressed syllables and constant-vowel combos
Ex: “Ju” for Juice
Second Stage: Toddlers add ending consonants, adjusting vowel lenght, and add unstressed syllables
2 ½
Might be able to say “feed” and stress one syllable
Third Stage: Toddlers able to say full words with correct stress pattern but lacks refinement
Ex: Says pagetti instead of spaghetti
Semantic Development
12 Months: 1-3 new words per week
18-24 Months: 1-2 words per day
Known as the Naming Explosion or Vocabulary Spurt
Why - Working memory is stronger, long-term memory is developing, strategies and limitations are starting to succesfully take more attention, development of categorization, memory retrieval, and imitation
Pragmatic Cues: To word meaning by paying attention to the social contexts in which the words are used
Ex: Kids use an adult’s focus of attention as a cue to word meaning
Fast-Mapping: Rapidly learning a new word from the contrastive use of a familiar and unfamiliar words
Syntactic Bootstrapping: Using the grammatical structure of whole sentences to figure out meaning
Ex: Children as young as 2 can figure out if a made up word is a verb, noun, etc.
Gender Differences
Until 2 Years Old, Girls learn more words at a faster rate compared to boys
After 2 Years Old, it becomes more even
Why: There is faster growth of the lest hemisphere early on in girls and parental figures talk more to toddler-aged girls
Referential Style: Vocabulary consists of object words
Expressive Style: Vocabulary consists of social formulas and pronouns
"Ex: “Thank you” & “Done”
Feelings and Needs
Children with this style are more sociable
Underextension: Applying Words too narrowly
Ex: A child’s favorite toy is called “bear” and nothing else, even actual bears, are called “bear”
Overextension: Using a word in a broader context than is appropriate
Ex: Calling any animal a dog
Grammatical Development
Syntax: Rules by which words are combined
Morphology: Use of grammar markers
Holophrastic Speech: Child typically expresses a whole phrase with a single word
Ex: “Eat”
1 - 1 ½ years old
Telegraphic Speech: Two-Word utterances
Nonessential elements are left out, leaving mostly nouns and verbs
Ex: “Drink Juice”
1 ½ - 2 ½ years old
Cross-cultural
Overregularization: Speech errors in which children treat irregular forms of words as if they were regular
Men becomes “Mans” and Went becomes “Goed”
Categorization
Categorization: Dividing objects into general categories
ie: vehicles, tools, sports, etc.
Category Hierarchies: Categories organized according to set-subset relations
Superordinate Level: Very Specific
Ex: Oak
Subordinate Level: Medium/in-between
Ex: Plant
Basic Level: Least Specific
Kids learn first
Ex: Tree
Perceptual Categorization: the grouping together of objects that have somewhat similar appearences.
Categorizating objects based on color, size, movements etc.
Naïve Psychology
Naïve Psychology: Commonsense level of understanding of other people and oneself
Crucial to human functioning
3 Concepts:
Desires
Jimmy wanted to play with Billy
Befliefs
Billy will be at home
Actions
Jimmy went to Billy’s house
Invisible mental states
Have cause-effect relations
Develop early in life
Debate on whether infants go do this
Theory of Mind (ToM)
Theory of Mind: Understanding that others have different desires, beliefs, intentions, and emotions
Develops between 2 ½ to 5 ½ years old
Kids with ASD can have trouble wit this
False-belief problems: Another person believes something to be true that the child knows is false
Sally-Anne False Belief Test: Younger children were showed Sally’s basket. Sally put a marble in her basket and leaves. Then, Anne comes and moves her marble to another basket. Then, Sally comes back. Children were asked if Sally would initally look into her basket or the basket the marble was in. If they said the other basket, the child has not developed ToM.
Theories of Intelligence
General Intelligence (“g”)
Factor analysis showed that all IQ test items are correlated and “g” underlies all
Fluid Intelligence: The ability to think on the spot to solve problems
Depends on:
Information Processing (the ability to look at different objects very quickly and be able to label them and spot the difference)
Adaptation to novel tasks
Working-Memory functioning
Ability to control attention
Decreases with Age
Prefrontal cortex more active
Crystallized Intelligence: The knowledge of the world, factual knowledge
Depends on:
Experience
Good Judgement
Social Customs
Increases with Age
Ex: Word meanings, State Capitals, and Answers to arithmetic problems
Primary Mental Abilities: Human intellect is composed of seven categories
Word Fluency
Verbal Meaning
Reasoning
Spatial Visualization
Fluid Intelligence
Numbering
Rote Memory
Perceptual Speed
Three-Stratum Theory of Intelligence
Comrpomise between single and multiple trait theories
“g” is at the top
Broad abiltities in the middle
Fluid intelligence, crystalized intelligence, etc.
More specific processes at the bottom
Sternberg’s Theory of Successfull Intelligence/ Triarchic Theory: View that intelligence is the ability to achieve success in life, which is based on three abilities:
Analytical
Academic problem solving and computation
Practical
Street Smarts and Common Sense
Creative
Imaginative and innovative problem solving
Broader ranges of capabilities then just IQ
Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences Theory: Proposes that people possess at least eight kinds of intelligence
Linguistic
Sensitivity to the meanings and sounds of words; mastery of syntax; appreciation of the ways language can be used
Professions: Poet, Teacher, Political Speaker
Logical-Mathematical
Understanding of objects and symbols, of the actions that can be performed on them, and of the relations between these actions; ability for abstraction; ability to indentify problems and seek explanations
Professions: Mathematician, Scientist
Spatial
Capacity to percieve the visual world accurately, to perform transformations upon perceptions, and to re-create aspects of visual experience in the absense of physical stimuli; sensitivity to tension, balance, and composition; ability to detect similar patterns
Professons: Artists, engineer, chess master
Musical
Sensitivity to individual tones and phrases of music; an understanfing of ways to combine tones and phrases into larger musical rhythms and structures; awareness of emotional aspects of music
Professions: Musician, Composer
Naturalistic
Sensitivity to, and understanding of, plants, animals, and other aspects of nature
Professions: Biological, Farmer, Conservationist
Bodily-Kinesthetic
Use of one’s own body in highly skilled ways for expressive or goal-directed purposes; capacity to handle objects skillfully
Professions: Dancer, athlete, actor
Intrapersonal
Access to one’s own feeling life; ability to draw on one’s emtions to guide and understand one’s behavior
Professions: Novelist, Therapist, Parent
Interpersonal
Ability to notice and make distinctions among the modds, temperaments, motications, and intentions of other people and potentially to act on this knowledge
Professions: Political leader, Religious leader, Parent, Teacher, Therapist
Existence of prodigies
Biological and professional Basis
Measuring Intelligence
Intelligence Quotient (IQ): A quantitative measure of intelligence relative to that of others of the same age
100 is the average
Stability: The consistency and continutiy of IQ as a person ages
Closer the time that test was given, the more stability
Average change of 13 points from 4-17
Outcomes IQ Predict
Academic Success
The higher the score, the better grades and achievement test scores are
Correlation typically between .50—.60
Strongest correlation with abstract subjects
Economic Success
The higher the score, the better performance; likelihood to makes more money; and recieve better promotion
Correlation with job performance .50
Better Predictors: Educational attainment and practical intelligence
Occupational Success
Due to standardized tests
Psychological Adjustment
Lower IQ → School Failure → Delinquency
Not Linked to interalizing problems
Other Predicators of Success
Motivation to succeed, conscientiousness, intellecutal curiosity, persistence in the face of obstacles, creativity, physical and mental health, and social skills
Self Discipline: The ability to inhibit actions, follow rules, and avoid implusive reactions
Alfred Binet
Created the first widely used intelligence test.
Purpose to identify children who who unlikely to benefit from standard instruction in the classrooom
Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC): The most widely used intelligence test for children 6+ years old.
WISC-V (Current Edition)
Produces an overall score, plus separate scores ons everal moderately general abilities
Consistent with Carroll’s Three-stratum framework
Primary Index Scales
Verbal Comprehension
Similarities
Vocabulary
Visual-Spatial
Block Design
Visual Puzzles
Fluid Reasoning
Matric Reasoning
Figure Weights
Working Memory
Digit Span
Picture Span
Processing Speed
Coding
Symbol Search
Genetic and Environmental Factors
Heritability of IQ is moderate in early childhood and increases by adolescense and adulthood
Changes with age
Heritability increases with age
45% varitability in IQ as a child, 35% with siblings
Genes 75% in adolescense, almost nothing with relatives
Because of independence
Influence on Nonshared Environment
A child’s immediate environment makes more of an impact in adolescense, despite genetics
Flynn Effect: The constant rise in average IQ scores over the past 80 years
United States gains have been roughly 10 points
Must be due to changes in society
Improvements in lives of low-income families
Increases in fluid intelligence due to new technologies
Greater increases seen in lower socioeconomic status
Linear and continuous
Ravens Progressive Matrixes Test: Found that British kids IQ test rose 14 points in only a few decades
Seen in other countries
Could be the possibility of the reverse Flynn effect in Western Europe (90s on)
Role of Family Income and Poverty
Poverty
Effects on IQ are indisputable
Due to inadequate diet, reduced access to health care, emotional conflicts, limited intellectual simulation
Income Risks
Wealthier families tend to have higher IQ
Race and Ethnicity
Highly controversal theory
Socioeconomics explain racial/ethnic differences in IQ
Studies show that White and Asian children have similar IQ, which is averagely higher then Black and Latino children
Due to socioeconomic status
Dimishing over time
Sameroff Environmental Risk factors’
Head of household unemployed
Mother did not complete high school
4+ Kids in family
Large number of stressful events
Maternal mental health
Project Head Start: Federally subsidized early education programs for children to get a “head start” on their formal education
Started in 1965 to lift families out of poverty by promoting literacy
Initially meant to be a summer program
40 Million children have participated
Provides:
Dental Care
Immunizations
Teaching English
Helping parents teach their children and solve conflicts
Very comprehensive
Sensation and Perception
Sensation: The processing of basic information from the world through the sense organs (eyes, ears, skin, etc.)
Perception: The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information about objects, events, and the world around us
Vision and Visual Acuity
The least matured sense of a newborn
Improves rapidly in first months
Visual Acuity: Determine how sharply or clearly infants can see
Adults and Children: Eye Charts
Infants: Pattern Distinction
Limited at birth
What an adult can see at 600 ft, and infant can see at 20 ft.
Adult level by 6 months
Cone Cells: The light senstive neurons that are highly concentrated in the fovea
Involved in seeing fine details and color
Spaced 4 times farther apart than adults
Infants prefer unique hues like blue
Do not see color for the first few months
Fovea: The central region of the retina
Infants foveas catch 2% of light, compared to 65% for adults
Retina: Light-senstive layer of tissue at the back of the eyeball
Image comes through and focuses on the retina
Created the images that you see
Have 20/120 vision at birth
Preferential Looking Technique
Two different visual stimuli are displayed side by side. If an infant looks longer at one of the two stimuli, the researcher can infer that (a) the baby can discriminate between them, and (b) the infant prefers one over the other
Established by Fantz
Modern versions use automatic eye trackers
Use a camera that mesaures eye movements via infrared light reflection
Head-mounted infant-eye trackers that show where infants are looking as they move their eyes freely around the room.
Pattern Perception
Newborns perfer patterns over plain stimuli due to inability to see small features
High contrast
Ex: Black and white checkerboard
Older infants prefer more complex patterns
Contrast sensitivity: Infants can detect a pattern only when it is composed of highly contrasting elements.
Object Perception
Perceptual Constancy: The perception of objects as being of constant size, shape, color, etc., despite phsycial differences in the retinal image of the object
Evident in the first week of life
Not dependent on experience
Ex: A door opening and closing
Object Segregation: The identification of seperate obhects in a visual array
Experience with specific objects helps infants understand their physcial properties
Common Movement: It refers to the perception of objects moving together in the same direction, speed, or pattern, aiding in the organization and recognition of objects in the visual field.
Ex: A box going over a line, do they focus on the full line or the two seperate lines?
Depth Perception
Depth Perception: The ability to judge distance of objects from one another and ourselves
Depth Cues Used by Infants
Optical Expansion: The visual image of an object increases in size as the object comes toward us, occluding more in the background
By 1 Month
Binocular Disparity: The closer the object, the more diiferent retinal images of it from the two eyes will be
Stereopsis: The process by which the visual cortex combines the different neural signals from each eye to create depth perception
By 4 Months
Monocular/Pictorial Cues: The perceptual cues of depth that can be achieved by one eye alone (e.g., relative size, interposition)
By 6-7 Months
Visual Cliff Study
Based on Visual Cliff Apparatus
It involved a glass-covered platform with a shallow and deep side to see if infants would perceive the drop and hesitate to cross, indicating depth perception development.
Showed depth perception develops within 1-2 months after baby begins to crawl
Hearing
Most developed sense at birth
Auditory Localization: the perception fo the spatial location of a sound source
Newborns turn towards a sound
Improves with growth
Infants can discriminate sounds
Volume
Duration
Pitch
Infants prefer listening to “baby talk,” their mothers voice over unfamiliar adults, and their native language
Lose senitivity to sounds not needed for home language
Taste & Smell
Innate responses in infancy
Sweet taste (preferred) → relaxed facial muscles
Sour taste → pursed lips
Sweet vs. Rotten smell → Happy vs. Unhappy expression
Prenatal Experiences
Early exposure to bitter flavors increase likelihood of preference for those flavors
Prenatal exposure to garlic → more likely to like garlic
Newborn Preferences
Prefer smell of mother’s breast milk
Can distinguish it
Intermodal Perception
Intermodal Perception: The combining of information from two or more sensory systems
Ex: Sucking on a pacifier without seeing it and able to recognize it once visible
Ex: Sight and sound of a ball
Ex: Matching Facial Expression with Voice
Helps with perception
Easier for infants to detect changes in stimulation that occur at the same time in two modalities
Piaget Core Principals
Constructivist Approach: Children as constructing knowledge for themselves in response to their experiences (“Little Scientists”)
Generating hypotheses
Performing experiences
Drawing conclusions
Schemas: Organized unit of knowledge used to understand and respond to situations
Become more “cognitive” over time
Considered a set of linked mental representations
Mental Representations: Internal depictions of information the mind can manipulate
Adaption
Assimilation: The process by which people incorporate incoming information into concepts they already understand
Ex: Calling a zebra a horse
Accommodation: The process by which people improve their current understanding in response to new experiences
Ex: Creating a new schema for zebras
Equilibration: The process by which people balance assimilation and accomodation to create stable understanding
Three Phases
People are satisfied with their understanding of a particular phenomenon
New information leads them to perceive that their understanding is inadequate
Develop a more sophisticated understanding
Continuity and Discontinutiy
Piaget’s stages are discontinuous
Qualitative Change
Moral judgements change based on age
Invariant Sequence: Everyone progresses throught the stages in the same order without skipping any of them
Broad Applicability
Characteristic of each stage influences children’s thinking across diverse topics and contexts
Sensorimotor Stage
Birth to 2 years old
Thinking via senses and motor skills
Substages
Basic Reflex Activity: Proficient in innate reflexes
Birth - 1 month
Primary Circular Reactions: Infants produce repetitive behavioris focused on own body
1 month - 4 months
Ex: Sucking thumb
Pleasureable response to chace event → repeated occurrence
Lacks object permanence, but begin to search for objects the disappear from sight
Secondary Circular Reactions: Repetitive behaviors now focused on external objects
4 - 8 months
Behaviors still not intentional
Can imitate familiar, but not novel, behaviors
Coordination of Secondary Circular Reactions: Schemas can be comined into complex sequences
8 - 12 months
Ex: hitting + reaching + grasping
Behavior intentional and goal-directed
Gain object permance but show A-not-B error
Teritary Circular Reactions: Toddlers experiment with external objects
12 - 18 months
Use of actions not previously linked to the objects variation → new outcomes
Improved problem solving
Display accurate A-B Search
Mental Representation: Reach ability to “think” befoer you act
18-24 months
Arrival at solutions suddently suggests mental representation of different actions
Deffered imitation appears
Leads to development of make-believe play
Object permanence: The understanding that objects continue to exist even when they are not visible
A-not-B Error: a phenomenon observed in infants where they continue to search for an object in the initial hiding place (A) even after seeing it being hidden in a new location (B)
Deferred Imitation: the ability to observe and remember another person's actions and then imitate those actions after a delay
Preoperational Stage
2 - 7 Years
Large increase in mental representations
Make believe play
Reinforces Schemas
Kids become detached from real-life conditions
Kids become less self-centered
Involves more complex cominations of schemas
Symbolic Representation: The use of one object, word, or thought to stand for another.
Ex: 5-year olds will play games involving pirates while wearing a patch over one eye
DeLoache’s Snoopy Study
Hiding a snoopy doll in a scale model of a room and then hiding a bigger snoopy doll in an identical room
Older kids could find it, younger kids couldn’t
Demostrates dual representation
Dual Representation: Viewing a symbolic object as an object and a symbol
Limitations
Egocentrism: Perceiving the world solely from one’s own point of view
Three Mountains Task - Kids younger than 4 could not imagine what the researcher was seeing from the other side of the mountain, so they assume they see from their own point of view
Pencils/Smarties Task - Kids were shown a box of smarties and asked what they believed was in the box. The kids said it would be smarties. But, when they were shown that the box of smarties had pencils in the box, the kids said they always believed pencils were in the box and others would think the same way.
Animistic Thinking: The belief that inanimate objects have lifelike qualities
Corresponds with magical thinking of preschoolers
Only applies with objects that move in real life
Lack of Conservation: Certain physical characteristics of objects remain the same, despite changes in outward appearence
Centration: Focus on a single, perceptually striking feature of an object or event to exclusion of other relevant features
Irreversibility: Inability to go through a series of steps in a problem and then mentally revesre direction and return to starting point
Concrete Operational Stage
7 - 11 Years
Characterized by more logical, fexible, and organized though and abilities
Conservation
Classification: classifying objects into groups and subgroups
Decentration: the ability to pay attention to multiple attributes of an object or situation rather than being locked into attending to only a single attribute
Spatial Reasoning
Reversibility
Seriation: The ability to order items along a quantitative dimesion
Transitive interference issues
Transitive interference: the ability to seriate mentally
Formal Operation Stage
11 Years Old and Beyond
Not everyone reaches this
Characterized by abstract, scientific thinking
Hypothetical Reasoning: hypothetical "what-if" situations that are not always rooted in reality
Metacognition: the awareness and understanding of one's own thought processes.
Cognitive Distortions: irrational thoughts that influence our emotions and behaviors. They are inaccurate or exaggerated beliefs about ourselves, others, or the world.
Imaginary Audience: Believing you are the focus
Personal Fable: Inflated opinion of self-importance
Critisms of Piaget
The stage model depicts children’s thinking as being more consistent than it is
Infants and young children are more cognitively competent than piaget recognized
Understates the contribution of the social world to cognitive development
Vague about mechansisms that give rise to children’s thinking and produce cogntitve growth
Information Processing Theory
Information Processing Theory: Children’s cognitive growth occurs continuously from gradually surmounting processing limitations through:
Exanding amount of information they can process at a time
Increasing processing speeds
Acquiring new strategies and knowledge
Thinking is a activity that occurs over time, with numerous mental operations underlying a single behavior
Task Analysis: identification of goals needed to perform the task, obstacles that prevent immediate realization of the goals, prior knowledge relevant to achieving the goals, and potential strategies for reaching the desired outcome
Computer Metaphor
Input devices (sensory memory) → Processor/RAM (working memory) ⬆ ⬇ Hard Drive Storage (long term memory) → Output (response to stimuli)
Store Model: Assumes we hold or store information in three parts of the mental system for processing
Sensory Memory: Represents sensory information
Working Memory: Actively attending to, gathering, maintaining, storing, and processing information is limited in both capacity (amount of information that can be stored) and length of time information can be retained.
Happnens in less than a second
Capacity and duration increases greatly during infancy and adolescence
Long Term Memory: Knowledge that people accumulate over their lifetime
Factual Knowledge
Knowing who one the Super Bowl last year or the capitals of different countries
Conceptual Knowledge
The concepts of justice and equality
Procedural Knowledge
Knowing how to shoot a basketball or play a specific video game)
Attitudes
Likes and dislikes regarding food or politics
Unlimited amount of information for unlimited periods of time
Encoding: The representation in memory of specific features of objects and events
Encode info that draws attention or they consider important
Faliure to encode means it will not be remembered later
Role of the Myelin: Increasing the number of axons covered with myelin means faster processing speed and more reliable transmissions of electrical impulses in the brain
Memory
Selective Attention: Intentionally focusing on the information most relevant to the current goal
Rehearsal: Repeating information to yourself
Organization: Grouping related items
Elaboration: creating relationships between two items not in same category
Retroactive Interference: The tendency of later learning to hinder the memory of previously learned material
Control Deficiencies: Kids know strategies but don’t use them consistently
Utilization Deficiencies: Kids use strategies but don’t benefit from them
Memory Retrival
Recognition: Noticing a stimulus is identical or similar to one previously experienced
Easier than recall
Young infants do it too
Recall: Generating a mental representation of an absent stimulus
More difficult than recognition
Can appear at one year
2 Year (1-2 items), 4 (3-4 items)
Overlapping Waves Theory: Individual children usually use a variety of approaches to solve such problems
Ex: Examining 5-year-olds’ reasoning on repeated trials of the conservation-of-number problem reveals that most children use at least three different strategies
Gist Memory: Focusing on details but sometimes lacking the ability to get the core kernel of what happened
Farmer Brown Study: Preschoolers and 2nd Graders were given the sentence “Farmer Brown owns three dogs, five sheep, seven chickens, nine horses, and 11 cows”
First Test (Vertaim Test) - Asked “How many cows farmer brown owns: either 11 or 9”
Second Test (Gist Test) - Asked “Does Farmer Brown have more cows or horses”
Showed 2nd graders had better verbatim and gist results but were better overall at gist memory and preschoolers were better at verbatim
Core Knowledge
Views kids as having innate knowledge in domains of special evolutionary importance
Domain-specific Understanding: Knowledge systems (“core domains of thought”) that appear early in life and allow infants to grasp new information
Allows children to distinguish between living and nonliving things
Theory of mind: the ability to attribute mental states—beliefs, intents, desires—to oneself and others, and to understand that others have beliefs, desires, intentions, and perspectives that are different from one's own.
IDing faces
Naïve theorists: Children develop theories of objects (physics), people (psychology) and knowledge of plants and animals (biology)
Physical Knowledge
Solid Objects can’t move through another
Size comparisons
Gravity
Numerical Knowledge
Infants can do simple math up to three
Controversial
Violation of Expectation: Infants will stare at events that would not be physically possible.
This shows they know basic core knowledge principals
René Bierijan (?) Study
Object Solidity
Open-Countainer (expected event)
Closed-Container condition (unexpected event)
Infants as young as 3 ½ months looked at the unexpected
Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory
Cognitive Development takes place through direct interaction
“Teaching is only effective when the road points toward the road for development” - Vygotsky
Language leads to cognitve change
Piagetian View: Egocentric Speech
Decreased by agruments with peers
Replaced by social speech (adapting)
Rejected by Vygotsky
Vygotsky’s View: Private Speech
Talking through problem solving out loud
Used for guidance and is a foundation for all higher cognitive processes
Becomes silent, inner speech as kids age
Age 4 to 6 Years
Guided participation: a process in which more knowledgable individuals organize activites in ways that allow less knowledgable people to perform the activity at a higher level than they could manage on their own.
Ex: a child’s mom holds one part of a toy so that the child can screw the two other parts together
Zone of Proximal Development: Tasks a child cannot do alone but can learn to do with help
Furthest Layer: Learner cannot do
Middle Layer: Learner can do with guidance
Innermost Layer: Learner can do unaided
Intersubjectivity: Two participants begin a task with different understandings but arrive at a shared understang
Creates a common ground
3-5 years do this: I think ___. What do you think?”
Joint Attention: Social partners focus on the same external object
Involved in language development
Ex: parents points at and names objects
Kids with ASD may struggle with this
Social Scaffolding: adults and others with greater expertise organize the physical and social environment to help children learn.
Learning aided by providing a temporary framework that supprts children’s thinking at a higher level than children could manage on their own
Framework includes:
Choosing a task beyond kid’s level but able to do with help
Demostrating how the task can be done
Helping learners accomplish the most difficult parts
Kids incorporate parent instruction into private speech
Reciprocal Teaching: Collaborative group effort leading dialog
Cognitive Strategies
Questioning
Summarizing
Clarifying
Predicting
Active teahcer involvement gradually declines
Cooperative Learning: Small groups of classmates work toward common goals
Easier in collectivist cultures
Comprehension and Production
Comprehension: Understanding what others say, sign, or right
Precedes Production
Production: Speaking, signing, or writing
Components of Langauage
Phonology: Rules of governing structure sequence of units of sounds
i. e. phonemes
Semantics: What concepts are expressed in words and word combos
e. g. vocabulary
Pragmatics: Rules for engaging in appropriate and effective communication
Generativity
Generativity: Using finite set of words and our knowledge of the systematic ways in which those words can be combines, we can generate an infinate number of sentences
We know that the plural of the fake word “wug” is “wugs”
Very complex for young learners
Nativist Perspective and Noam Chomsky
Nativist Perspective: Developed by Noam Chomsky, the nativist perspective says that children assume much responsibility for learning a language
Language is a human accomplishment
Language Acquistion Device (LAD): Innate sustem that allows children to combine words (with consistent grammar) and understand meaning
Universal Grammar: Proposed set of highly abstract, unconscious rules governing grammar in all human languages
Hard-wired and within the LAD
Argues all languages have similar underlying structures despite surface differences
Language is mastered spontaneously with limited exposure
Language Training is unnecessary
Nativist Perspective Support
Does not really work with other animals
Kanzi, along with other primates and some dolphins, can learn basic grammar but cannot use complex syntax
Lacks pragmatic knowledge (Social Communication Skills)
It took Kanzi years to be able to learn, kids learn much faster
There are structures in the brain that are linked to language
Broca’s Area (Production)
Wernicke’s Area (Comprehension)
Proved that the brain has critical periods and sensitive periods for language development
Lennenberg proposed brain development must happen during brain lateralization
Genie was not taught language early in life, so she was unable to fully be able to speak properly
Nativist Perspective Critisms
Genie: If left hemisphere is damaged, right hemisphere can compensate except for grammar
Doubts about universal grammar
Kids don’t completly master grammar but learning and discovery continue to shape it
Ignores social factors
Belived that language prerequisites are the human brain and experience
Interactionist Perspective
Language Acquistiton Support System (LAS): Views parents as facilitators of language acquisition with several different strategies
Ex: Playing Games with a Child
Infant Directed Speech: Speaking with greater pitch variability, slower speech, shorter utterances, more word repetition, and mroe questions.
AKA Motherese or Parentese
Warm and affectionate tone, higgh pitch, clearer enunciation, slower speech, and exaggerated facial expressions captures a child’s attention but does not overwhelm them.
Infants prefer this but may respond less appropriately
Seen in other languages (including Sign Language), but not universal
Shares Important Information with infants
Lowering pitch meand disproval
Draws attention to speech
Expansion: Imitating and expanding a child’s statement
Ex: A child says “Daddy Juice” and the adult repeats the phrase but words it correctly “Daddy drinks juice”
Recast: Rendering incomplete sentences into more complex grammatical form
Ex: Child says “Doggy eat” and adult asks “what is the doggy eating”
Increases rate of language development
Prelinguistic Development
Prosody: Characteristic rhythm, tempo, cadence, melody, etc. with ehich a language is spoken
Responsible for why languge sounds different from each other
Infants sensitive to it
May help with learning a child’s native language faster
Categorical Perception: The perception of speech sounds as belonging to discrete categories
Newborns capable
By 7-10 months: can detect syllables
By 12 months: Stop attending to sounds not useful in natice tongue
Voice Onset Time (VOT): the lenght of time between when air passes through the lips and when the vocal cords start vibrating
Young infants draw sharp disticntions between speech sounds
Word Segmentation: Figuring out where the spoken words start and end
As Young as 7 Months Old
8 Mo ths of Age: English-learning infants expect stressed syllables to begin words and can use this information to pull words out of fluent speech
Distributional Properties: Sounds that are part of the same word are more likely to occur together than others
Infants can discriminte between the words and the sequences that were not words.
Days after birth and on, use predictable sound patterns to fish words out of the passing stream of speech
Can understand their name as young as 4 ½ months
Cooing: Drawn-out vowel sounds
“oooo” “aaahhh”
Emerges between 6-8 weeks
Helps infant gain motor control over vocalizations
Babbling: Repeating strings of sounds comprising a constant followed by a vowel
“Babababa”
Emerges around 4 Months
Deaf infants babble with their hands
Will eventually become first words
Gradually takes on sounds, rhythm, and intonational patterns of the language infants hear or see daily
Eye Gaze
At 4 months - Infants begin to gaze where adults look
Intersubjectivity and Joint Attention
Gestures
Protodeclarative: Used to make statement about an object
Holds an object, Points While Looking at Parent
Protoimperative: Used to get someone to do something they want
Reaching, making sounds at the same time
Phonological Development
Developing ability to:
Attend to sound sequences
Produce sounds
Combine sounds in understandable words and phrases
Phonemes: Individual unit of speech sound
/p/, /b/, <sh>, <ch>
Different languages have different meanings
Early Phase (10-15 Months)
First words during this time, but often mispronounced
Ex: Banana becomes “nana” or brother becomes “bubba”
First words are often common nouns
Some first words common across langugues (bye-bye, night-night, mine, all gone)
Toddlers
Developmental pattern of strategies starts around age 2
First Stage: Minimal Words are produces
Focus on stressed syllables and constant-vowel combos
Ex: “Ju” for Juice
Second Stage: Toddlers add ending consonants, adjusting vowel lenght, and add unstressed syllables
2 ½
Might be able to say “feed” and stress one syllable
Third Stage: Toddlers able to say full words with correct stress pattern but lacks refinement
Ex: Says pagetti instead of spaghetti
Semantic Development
12 Months: 1-3 new words per week
18-24 Months: 1-2 words per day
Known as the Naming Explosion or Vocabulary Spurt
Why - Working memory is stronger, long-term memory is developing, strategies and limitations are starting to succesfully take more attention, development of categorization, memory retrieval, and imitation
Pragmatic Cues: To word meaning by paying attention to the social contexts in which the words are used
Ex: Kids use an adult’s focus of attention as a cue to word meaning
Fast-Mapping: Rapidly learning a new word from the contrastive use of a familiar and unfamiliar words
Syntactic Bootstrapping: Using the grammatical structure of whole sentences to figure out meaning
Ex: Children as young as 2 can figure out if a made up word is a verb, noun, etc.
Gender Differences
Until 2 Years Old, Girls learn more words at a faster rate compared to boys
After 2 Years Old, it becomes more even
Why: There is faster growth of the lest hemisphere early on in girls and parental figures talk more to toddler-aged girls
Referential Style: Vocabulary consists of object words
Expressive Style: Vocabulary consists of social formulas and pronouns
"Ex: “Thank you” & “Done”
Feelings and Needs
Children with this style are more sociable
Underextension: Applying Words too narrowly
Ex: A child’s favorite toy is called “bear” and nothing else, even actual bears, are called “bear”
Overextension: Using a word in a broader context than is appropriate
Ex: Calling any animal a dog
Grammatical Development
Syntax: Rules by which words are combined
Morphology: Use of grammar markers
Holophrastic Speech: Child typically expresses a whole phrase with a single word
Ex: “Eat”
1 - 1 ½ years old
Telegraphic Speech: Two-Word utterances
Nonessential elements are left out, leaving mostly nouns and verbs
Ex: “Drink Juice”
1 ½ - 2 ½ years old
Cross-cultural
Overregularization: Speech errors in which children treat irregular forms of words as if they were regular
Men becomes “Mans” and Went becomes “Goed”
Categorization
Categorization: Dividing objects into general categories
ie: vehicles, tools, sports, etc.
Category Hierarchies: Categories organized according to set-subset relations
Superordinate Level: Very Specific
Ex: Oak
Subordinate Level: Medium/in-between
Ex: Plant
Basic Level: Least Specific
Kids learn first
Ex: Tree
Perceptual Categorization: the grouping together of objects that have somewhat similar appearences.
Categorizating objects based on color, size, movements etc.
Naïve Psychology
Naïve Psychology: Commonsense level of understanding of other people and oneself
Crucial to human functioning
3 Concepts:
Desires
Jimmy wanted to play with Billy
Befliefs
Billy will be at home
Actions
Jimmy went to Billy’s house
Invisible mental states
Have cause-effect relations
Develop early in life
Debate on whether infants go do this
Theory of Mind (ToM)
Theory of Mind: Understanding that others have different desires, beliefs, intentions, and emotions
Develops between 2 ½ to 5 ½ years old
Kids with ASD can have trouble wit this
False-belief problems: Another person believes something to be true that the child knows is false
Sally-Anne False Belief Test: Younger children were showed Sally’s basket. Sally put a marble in her basket and leaves. Then, Anne comes and moves her marble to another basket. Then, Sally comes back. Children were asked if Sally would initally look into her basket or the basket the marble was in. If they said the other basket, the child has not developed ToM.
Theories of Intelligence
General Intelligence (“g”)
Factor analysis showed that all IQ test items are correlated and “g” underlies all
Fluid Intelligence: The ability to think on the spot to solve problems
Depends on:
Information Processing (the ability to look at different objects very quickly and be able to label them and spot the difference)
Adaptation to novel tasks
Working-Memory functioning
Ability to control attention
Decreases with Age
Prefrontal cortex more active
Crystallized Intelligence: The knowledge of the world, factual knowledge
Depends on:
Experience
Good Judgement
Social Customs
Increases with Age
Ex: Word meanings, State Capitals, and Answers to arithmetic problems
Primary Mental Abilities: Human intellect is composed of seven categories
Word Fluency
Verbal Meaning
Reasoning
Spatial Visualization
Fluid Intelligence
Numbering
Rote Memory
Perceptual Speed
Three-Stratum Theory of Intelligence
Comrpomise between single and multiple trait theories
“g” is at the top
Broad abiltities in the middle
Fluid intelligence, crystalized intelligence, etc.
More specific processes at the bottom
Sternberg’s Theory of Successfull Intelligence/ Triarchic Theory: View that intelligence is the ability to achieve success in life, which is based on three abilities:
Analytical
Academic problem solving and computation
Practical
Street Smarts and Common Sense
Creative
Imaginative and innovative problem solving
Broader ranges of capabilities then just IQ
Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences Theory: Proposes that people possess at least eight kinds of intelligence
Linguistic
Sensitivity to the meanings and sounds of words; mastery of syntax; appreciation of the ways language can be used
Professions: Poet, Teacher, Political Speaker
Logical-Mathematical
Understanding of objects and symbols, of the actions that can be performed on them, and of the relations between these actions; ability for abstraction; ability to indentify problems and seek explanations
Professions: Mathematician, Scientist
Spatial
Capacity to percieve the visual world accurately, to perform transformations upon perceptions, and to re-create aspects of visual experience in the absense of physical stimuli; sensitivity to tension, balance, and composition; ability to detect similar patterns
Professons: Artists, engineer, chess master
Musical
Sensitivity to individual tones and phrases of music; an understanfing of ways to combine tones and phrases into larger musical rhythms and structures; awareness of emotional aspects of music
Professions: Musician, Composer
Naturalistic
Sensitivity to, and understanding of, plants, animals, and other aspects of nature
Professions: Biological, Farmer, Conservationist
Bodily-Kinesthetic
Use of one’s own body in highly skilled ways for expressive or goal-directed purposes; capacity to handle objects skillfully
Professions: Dancer, athlete, actor
Intrapersonal
Access to one’s own feeling life; ability to draw on one’s emtions to guide and understand one’s behavior
Professions: Novelist, Therapist, Parent
Interpersonal
Ability to notice and make distinctions among the modds, temperaments, motications, and intentions of other people and potentially to act on this knowledge
Professions: Political leader, Religious leader, Parent, Teacher, Therapist
Existence of prodigies
Biological and professional Basis
Measuring Intelligence
Intelligence Quotient (IQ): A quantitative measure of intelligence relative to that of others of the same age
100 is the average
Stability: The consistency and continutiy of IQ as a person ages
Closer the time that test was given, the more stability
Average change of 13 points from 4-17
Outcomes IQ Predict
Academic Success
The higher the score, the better grades and achievement test scores are
Correlation typically between .50—.60
Strongest correlation with abstract subjects
Economic Success
The higher the score, the better performance; likelihood to makes more money; and recieve better promotion
Correlation with job performance .50
Better Predictors: Educational attainment and practical intelligence
Occupational Success
Due to standardized tests
Psychological Adjustment
Lower IQ → School Failure → Delinquency
Not Linked to interalizing problems
Other Predicators of Success
Motivation to succeed, conscientiousness, intellecutal curiosity, persistence in the face of obstacles, creativity, physical and mental health, and social skills
Self Discipline: The ability to inhibit actions, follow rules, and avoid implusive reactions
Alfred Binet
Created the first widely used intelligence test.
Purpose to identify children who who unlikely to benefit from standard instruction in the classrooom
Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC): The most widely used intelligence test for children 6+ years old.
WISC-V (Current Edition)
Produces an overall score, plus separate scores ons everal moderately general abilities
Consistent with Carroll’s Three-stratum framework
Primary Index Scales
Verbal Comprehension
Similarities
Vocabulary
Visual-Spatial
Block Design
Visual Puzzles
Fluid Reasoning
Matric Reasoning
Figure Weights
Working Memory
Digit Span
Picture Span
Processing Speed
Coding
Symbol Search
Genetic and Environmental Factors
Heritability of IQ is moderate in early childhood and increases by adolescense and adulthood
Changes with age
Heritability increases with age
45% varitability in IQ as a child, 35% with siblings
Genes 75% in adolescense, almost nothing with relatives
Because of independence
Influence on Nonshared Environment
A child’s immediate environment makes more of an impact in adolescense, despite genetics
Flynn Effect: The constant rise in average IQ scores over the past 80 years
United States gains have been roughly 10 points
Must be due to changes in society
Improvements in lives of low-income families
Increases in fluid intelligence due to new technologies
Greater increases seen in lower socioeconomic status
Linear and continuous
Ravens Progressive Matrixes Test: Found that British kids IQ test rose 14 points in only a few decades
Seen in other countries
Could be the possibility of the reverse Flynn effect in Western Europe (90s on)
Role of Family Income and Poverty
Poverty
Effects on IQ are indisputable
Due to inadequate diet, reduced access to health care, emotional conflicts, limited intellectual simulation
Income Risks
Wealthier families tend to have higher IQ
Race and Ethnicity
Highly controversal theory
Socioeconomics explain racial/ethnic differences in IQ
Studies show that White and Asian children have similar IQ, which is averagely higher then Black and Latino children
Due to socioeconomic status
Dimishing over time
Sameroff Environmental Risk factors’
Head of household unemployed
Mother did not complete high school
4+ Kids in family
Large number of stressful events
Maternal mental health
Project Head Start: Federally subsidized early education programs for children to get a “head start” on their formal education
Started in 1965 to lift families out of poverty by promoting literacy
Initially meant to be a summer program
40 Million children have participated
Provides:
Dental Care
Immunizations
Teaching English
Helping parents teach their children and solve conflicts
Very comprehensive