Chapter 3: Developing Through The Life Span
Developmental Psychology: womb to tomb
Nature and Nurture (+ epigenetics)
Prenatal Development
Germinal stage - conception to 2 weeks
Embryonic stage - 2 weeks to 8 weeks (organogenesis)
Organs in place
Fetal stage - 9 weeks to birth
Cephalocaudal pattern of development
“Head to tail”
Proximodistal pattern of development
“in/out”
Teratogens
Can cross the placenta and harm the baby
Ex. smoking, drinking, etc
The Competent Newborn
Reflexes
Rooting, grasping, sucking, Moro
Senses
Vision most poorly developed
Perceptual Development
Depth perception
Visual cliff
Cognitive Development
Jean Piaget
Schemas, assimilation, accommodation
Schemas - How we organize information; a “file folder”
How we recognize things
Assimilation
Associating new information with old information/existing schemas
Ex. A baby calling a woman “mom”
Accommodation
Creating a new folder for new information
Sensorimotor stage - birth to 2 years
Causality: Infant learns to control things
Imitation: Doing and Repeating what they see
Object Permanence: Out of sight, out of mind
Learning to understand something is still there
Preoperational stage - 3 to 6 or 7
Egocentrism: Can only see things from their POV
Lack of Conservation: Not understanding change of mass or volume
Concrete operational stage - 7 to 12 years
3rd eye problem: No abstract thinking, “here and now”
Formal operational stage
Creative thinking; can think in hypotheticals
Social Development
Harry Harlow’s experiment with rhesus monkeys
Surrogate Moms - 1 wire with food, 1 with soft cloth but no food
Contact Comfort - attachments are important
What did Harry Harlow do in his experiments?
Exposed baby monkeys to two “surrogate moms”, one with wire with food and one with soft cloth but no food.
What were his results?
The monkey was attracted to the soft cloth mother
Why were his findings important?
The prevailing wisdom was that feeding was important for attachment, however the study proved that comfort was important instead.
Deprivation of Attachment
Erik Erikson - trust vs. mistrust
Developmental relationship between infant & caregiver