Psych 201 - Exam 1 Flashcards
Aristotle
Goodness of fit: Concerned with fitting child rearing to needs of individual child
Empiricist View
Wrote about periods of childhood development
From 4th Century B.C.
Plato
Self control and discipline
Nativist View
From 4th Century B.C.
Medieval Period
Preformationism: Humans are preformed at instant creation (homunculus)
Effects
Caused people to view kids as mini-adults
Kids worked
Reformation Period
Puritan Doctrine
Kids tainted by original sin
Kids born evil and stubborn
Harsh and strict parenting
Must become civilized
Enlightenment Period
John Locke
Nurture View
Tabula Rasa: Blank Slate
Rational Tutoring: First discipline, then increase freedom
Believed in rewards and positive attention
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Noble Savage: Innate goodness
Nature View
Maximum Freedom
Permissive-parenting approach
Industrial Revolution Period
Social Reform
Working condition for kids
First Labor Laws
First Child Studies
Prussia 1839
Britain’s Factory Act 1839
Earl of Shaftesbury
1938 - First US federal law
Charles Darwin
Born in 1809, died in 1882
1877: Published “A Biological Sketch of an Infant”
On son, William, “Dottie”
Very Detailed
Theory of Evolution
Influences research on attachment, innate fears, etc
Nature and Nurture
Nature: Focus on Genetics
Nurture: Focus on Environments
Looks at the interaction of both
Epigenetics: the study of stable changes in gene expression that are mediated by the environment
Methylation: a biochemical process that reduces expression of a variety of genes and is involved in regulating reactions to stress.
Continuity and Discontinuity
Continuity: a gradual increase of skills over time
ie: A pine tree growing taller and taller
Discontinuity: a sudden qualitative changes with plateaus
ie: caterpillar to cocoon to butterfly
Stage theories: development occurs in a progression of distinct age-related stages
Conservation of Liquid Example
Discontinuous: ages seem qualitatively different
Mechanisms of Development
Mediators: one variable contributes to development by way of its effect on another variable
Relationship dynamics → quality → mental health in children
Moderators: one variable influences the impact of another variable on development
stress → depression, social support ⬆
Sociocultural Context
Cross-cultural comparisons
Practices that are rare or nonexistent in one culture are common in others
Newborns have own room, in other countries babies sleep in parents bed for a few years
Socioeconomic status: a measure of social class that is based on income and education
Kids in US live reasonably comfortable circumstances, but many do not
Kids in poorer families do less well than other kids
Infancy health problems
Less brain surface area
More likely to drop out/ teen pregnancy
Cumulative risk: the accumulation of the socioeconomic disadvantages over years of development which is the biggest obstacle to poor children’s successful development.
Scientific Method
Steps
Choosing a research question to be answered
Formatting a hypothesis: testable predictions
Developing a method to test hypothesis
Use data to draw conclusion
Reliability
Consistency
Variability means errors
Interrater reliability: Two independent observers rate and compare
looks for correlation
Test-retest reliability: testing twice, over time, to see if theres a similar result
Validity
Accuracy
Internal validity: effects observed within experiments can be attributed with confidence to the factor that the researcher is testing
independent’s variable’s impact
too many confounding variables
External validity: the ability to generalize research findings beyond the particulars of the research in question
real world condition
Research Methods
Clinical Interviews: flexible interview in which researcher obtains full account of participant’s thoughts
Benefits: Depth in little time
Limitations: Subject to inaccuracy, hard for kids
Structured Interviews and Questionnaires: Self-report instruments in which each participants is asked the same way.
EX: Likard scale (rating from 1 → 5)
Benefits: Permits comparison & efficiently collects and scores data
Limitations: Social desirability, doesn’t yield as much info as clinical interview, tough for kids
Naturalistic Observation: Researchers observes in a background setting
Benefits: Minimizes presence influence
Limitation: Hard to control, occasionally in everyday environment
Structured Observation: Observed behaviors in a lab
Benefits: Equal opportunity to display behavior
Limitations: Lack of external validity, observer influence & bias
Correlation Design: Indicates how two variables are related
Correlation Coefficient
Represented by “r” symbol
direction and strength
+1.00 - -1.00
Directionality Problem: a correlation does not indicate which variable is the cause and which variable is the effect.
Doesn’t indicate what causes what
Third Variable Problem: the correlation between two variables may be the result of some third, unspecified variable
Experimental Design: Permits cause and effect inferences
Random Assignment: assigning participants to one experimental group or another according to chance
Experimental Control: the ability of the researcher to determine the specific experiences that children in each group encounter during the study
Experimental Group: The group that is being tested/ experience of interest
Control Group: Group treated identically except that they are not presented the experience of interest
Independent Variable: Manipulated by researchers
Dependent Variable: Outcome expected to be influenced by IV
Developmental Research Designs
Cross-Sectional: Same participants from different age groups tested over some general period of time
Benefits: Yields useful data about differences among age groups, quick and easy to administer
Limitations: Uninformative about stability of individual differences over time, uninformative about similarities
Time Lag: Groups are tested at the same age, but at different times
Benefits: Addresses the potential effects of time
Limitations: Cohort but not directionality problem
Longitudinal: a set of participants tested at several different ages
Benefits: Indicates the degree of stability of individual differences over long periods, reveals individual children’s patterns of children’s patterns of change of long periods of time
Limitations: selective attrition, bias sampling, practice effects, cohort effects
Sequential: Several different age groups over several different age groups
Benefits: Combines all, rules out cohort and time
Limitations: Takes very long
Microgenetic: Children observed intensively over a relatively short period while a change is occurring.
Benefits: Intensive observation while change is occurring, reveals individual change patterns over short periods in detail
Limitations: does not provide info about typical patterns of change over long periods of time, does not yield data regarding change patterns over long periods.
Conception
Epigenesis: the emergence of new structures and functions during development
Widely accepted
Contrasts preformationism
published by Aristotle
Gametes: reproductive cells (egg & sperm) that contain only half genetic material of all cells
Haploid Cell
Meiosis: Cell division that produces gametes
23 Chromosomes from Mom and 23 from Dad
Occurs from birth for girls, during puberty for boys
Zygote: fertilized egg cell
diploid cell
46 chromosomes in 23 pairs
Germinal Period: From conception to 2 weeks
Blastocyst: inner mass and trophoblast
Trophoblast grows into placenta
Neural Tube
U-shaped grooves move together and fuse to create the neural tube
Will develop into the brain
Embryonic Disk
Forms three cell layers at weeks 3-4
Ectoderm: nervous system and skin
Mesoderm: muscles, skeletons, circulatory system
Endoderm: digestive system, lungs, urinary tract, gland
Placenta: a rich network of blood vessels, weighing roughly one pound, that extends into the tissues of the mother’s uterus
Semipermeable: permits the exchange of materials carried in the bloodstreams of the fetus and its mother, but prevents the blood of the mother and fetus from mixing
Chorion: a membrane that surrounds a developing fetus in conjunction with the amnion
Amnion (amnionic sac): the fetal membrane the directly surrounds the fetus
protects the baby from the mother’s body, provides nutrients, immunity, waste removal, and gas exchange
Embryonic Period
Mitosis: Cell division
Cell migration: the movement of newly formed cells away from their point of origin
Neurons deep inside brains travel to outer levels of the developing brain
Cell differentiation: Cells start to specialize after mitosis and become distinguished from one another
Apoptosis: Cell death
Ex: cells in the hand die to make room for fingers
Hormonal Influences
Sex differentiation
Androgens leads to testosterone leads to male genitalia
Steroids limit fetal growth and help fetal tissues mature
glucocorticoids
End of gestation, fetus increase production to mature key organs that are needed outside of the womb
Cephalocaudal Development: development takes place at a more rapid pace than later development and that the areas nearer the head develop earlier than those far away
Rapid organ growth
Weeks 5-8
Week by Week breakdown
Week 3: Embryo forms three layers, neural tube develops
Week 4: Neural tube develops into brain and spinal cord, heart is visible, legs and arm buds are visible
Weeks 5-9: Facial features differentiate, rapid brain growth, internal organs form, fingers and toes emerge, sex differentiation
Fetal Period
Week by Week breakdown
Week 10-12: Heart develops basic adult structures, spine and ribs develop, brain forms major divisions
Week 13-24: Lower body growth accelerates, external genitalia, body develops hairy outer covering, basic facial expressions, fetal movements felt
Weeks 25-38: Triples in size, brain and lungs fully developed at 28 weeks, visual and auditory systems work, fetus can learn and behaviors emerge
Vernix: a white, creamy film covering the skin of the fetus
Provides immune, temperature control, and moisturization, protects from amniotic fluid
Lanugo: Fine, soft, hair on the skin of the baby
protects from amniotic fluid
Age of viability: Between 22-26 weeks where a fetus can survive if born early
Last 3rd of 1st trimester: baby can kick, suck thumb, swallow
Habitation: a decrease in response to repeated or continued stimulation
Dishabituation: a perceptible change occurs, it becomes interesting again
Hazards to Prenatal Development
Critical Period: When a particular type of growth must happen
Sensitive Period: When a certain type of development is most likely to happen but may happen later
Teratogens: A potentially harmful agent
Dose-response relation: the greater the fetus’s exposure to a potential teratogen, the more likely it is that the fetus will suffer damage and the more severe any damage is likely to be
Sleeper Effects: The impact of a given agent may not be apparent for many years
DES Example: Diethylstibestrol (DES) used to prevent miscarriage doesn’t effect babies but theres elivated risk of cervicle and testicular cancer in adolescence and adulthood
Antidepressent Effects
Can help reduce postpartum depression
Inconclusive if its bad for fetus
Smoking Effects
Fewer breathing movement while smoking
Metabolize cancer causing agents
Low birth weight
Limb malformation
SIDS
ADHD
Low IQ
Cancer
Critical period: 4-6 Weeks
Alcohol Effects
Growth Stunts
Mental Stunts
Low birth weight
ADHD
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
Facial characteristics
Intellectual disabilities
Attention Problems
Hyperactivity
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS): A suddent death of a baby younger than age 1 that does not have a known cause.
Maternal Age
Mothers 15 and Under
3-4x more likely to die before their first birthday
Geratric Pregnancy: 35 or older
Risk for autism and chromosomal disorders
Effects of Malnutrition
Effects growth of fetal brain
Lack of Folic Acid
Spinal Bifida
Neural tube defects
Premature brain
Attention issues
Effects of Rubella
Major malformations
Deafness
Blindness
Intellectual Disabilities
Effects of STIs
Cytomegalovirus (CMV): Type of herpes
Central nervous system damage
Hearing loss
Blindness
Death
Damages fetal CNS
HIV
Can be passed onto kid through birth and breast milk
Effects of Infections
Zika: a mosquito borne viral infection
Can cause microcephaly which makes a babies head smaller than expected
hearing loss
vision loss due to seizures
intellectual disability
First trimestor of pregnancy
Paracites
tocoplasmosis
Leads to an increased chance in schizophrenia
Birth
Corticotrophin-Releasing Hormone: Truggers release of other hormoes to start birth process
Estrogen
Oxytocin
Cortisol
Childbirth Approaches
Shared Goals: Safeguarding health of mother and child, social integration of child
Differences: Public vs. Private event, Home vs. Hospital, Standing vs. Laying
APGAR Scale
Goal: To see if extra medical care or emergency care right after a babies birth
A - Appearnace
Blue = 0
Pink body, blue arms & legs = 1
Pink = 2
P - Pulse
No heartbeat = 0
<100 bpm = 1
100-140 bpm = 2
G - Grimace
No reflex = 0
Weak reflex = 1
Strong reflex = 2
A - Activity
Limp = 0
Weak arm/leg movement = 1
Strong arm/leg movement = 2
R - Respiration
No breaking for 60 seconds = 0
Irregular shallow breathing = 1
Strong breathing & crying = 2
Predicitve ability
A score of 7+ is good and means no intervention is needed, any less there may be issues and intervention may be needed
State of Arousal
States: Level of Arousal and engagements ranges from deep sleep to intense activity
Quiet Sleep: 8 hours
Active Sleep: 8 hours
Alert Awake: 2 ½ hours
Active Awake: 2 ½ hours
Drowsing: 1 hour
Crying: 2 hours
Sleeping
Newborns sleep twice as much as adults
50% of sleep in newborns, declines by 20% by age 3 through 5
REM vs. Non-REM sleep
REM (Rapid eye movement)
Active sleep: Quick, jerky eye movements (myoclonic twitching)
Stimulation leads to central nervous system growth
Dreaming
Non-REM sleep
Deep Sleep: absense of motor activity
Slower brain waves, breathing and heart rate
Techniques
Graduated Extinction: parents slowly increased their delays in responding to their infant crying
no effects on infant stress
Extinction: putting a baby in their crib fully awake and allowing them to fuss or cry until they falls asleep — without help from the parent
decreases in nocturnal wakefulness
Crying
Why Infants Cry
Communication, hungry, temperature change, noise, pain
Adult responsiveness
Physiological arousal and psychological disconmfort
Effects the periacueductal grey of the midbrain
What to do when infants cry
1st - Feeding
2nd - Rocking, swaddling, pacifier, gentle rhythmic motion, massage
3rd - let baby cry it out for a short period
Parental Responsiveness
Ethological perspective: responsiveness means needs are met
parent teaches ways to communicate
Behaviorist perspective: consistent responding reinforces crying responses
Developmental perspective: crying is normal and babies are independent of parental responsiveness
Heightened at 3 months and in the evening
Colic: Crying for no apparent reason during the first few months of life
Causes unknown
May be caused by allergic responses
1 in 10 infants have colic
Ends by 3 month
Low birth weight: Infants who weigh less than 5 ½ pounds
Causes: prematurity, teratogens, pollution, multiple births
Long term outcomes: Neurosensory deficits, frequent illness, lower IQ scores, lower educational achievement
Prematurity: A baby born at 35 weeks or earlier after conceptions
Causes: Pollution
Small for Gestational Age: Weighing substancially less than normal at either preterm or full-term for their gestational age based on weeks since conception
Skin to skin contact: A baby is laid directly on mothers’ bare chest after birth, both of them covered in a warm blanket and left for at least an hour after the first feed
Kangaroo care: Caregivers act as incubators to help maintain infants’ skin temperature and to promote breast-feeding
Genotype: inherited genetic material
Phenotype: the observable expression of the genotype, including both body characterisitcs and behavior
Chromosomes: long threatlike molecules made up of two twisted strands of DNA
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid): the carrier of all the biochemical instructions involved in the formation and functioning of an organism
Genes: the basic unit of heredity in all living theme
Alleles: Two or more different forms of genes
Homozygous: Two dominant or two recessive gene
Heterozygous: Two different alleles—one dominant and the other recessive
Regulator Genes: Genes that control the activity of other genes
Turns on and off genes
If one is inactivated, another one is turned on
Patterns of Inheritance: Transmission of genetic material from parent to offspring
Dominant Recessive: Heterozygous conditions, influence of only once allele
Domiant allele affects phenotype
Reccesive allele has no effect, unless paired with another reccesive allele
Carriers: Heterozygous individuals who can pass recessive traits to offspring
Recessive Gene Disorders
Phenylketonuria (PKU): a disorder on chromosome 12 that comes from both parents who cannot metabolize phenylalanine. This causes impared brain development and intellecutal disabilities.
X-Linked: a recessive gene carried on the X chromosome
Males more likely to be afftected (colorblindness and hemophilia)
Codominance: Both alleles in a heterozygous combination are expressed
Mutation: Sudden, permanent change in a DNA segment
Polygenic Inheritance: Genes that individually exert a small effect
Traits show gradations
Chromosomal and Gene Anomalies: Errors in cell division can result in zygotes with extra or missing chromosomes or genes
Chromosomal
Down Syndrome
XYY Syndrome
Klinefelter Syndrome (XXY)
Triple X Syndrome
Turner Syndrome (X0)
Gene
Williams syndrome
Norm of Reaction: All phenotypes can theoretically result from a given genotype in relation to all the environment in which it can survive/develop
Genetic-Environment Interaction: Inherited vulnerability and specific environmental conditions are needed to produce a disorder
Also known as the Diathesis-Stress Model
EX: PKU
High Phenmylaline Foods vs. Low Phenmylaline Foods
Reciprocal Gene-Envrionement: Those with a genetic predisposition for a disorder may also have a genetic tendency to create environmental risk factors that promote the disorder
Behavior Genetics
Heritability: Extent to which variability in a particular behavior in a population
0.0 to 1.0; higher number, greater heritability
Population not individual
Shared Environmental Factors: what family members have in common
Nonshared Environmental Factors: what is distinct among family members
Research Designs
Family Study: Determines whether phenotypic traits are correlated with the degree to which people are genetically related
Parents and Children
Identical and Fraternal twins
Non-twin siblings or adpotive family members
Twin Study: Compares correlation for identical (monozygotic or MZ) twins with those for same-sex fraternal (dizygotic or DZ) twins.
Chorionicty: difference in the degree of placental sharing
Adoption study: Examines whether adopted children’s scores on a given measure are correlated more highly with those of their biological parents and siblings or with those of their adoptive parents and siblings
Neuron: Cells of the nervous system
Cell Body: the basic biological material that keeps the neuron functioning
Dendrites: fibers that recieve input from other cells and conduct it toward the cell body in the form of elelctrical impulses
Spines: tiny protrusions from dendrites, which form functional contacts with neighboring axons of other neurons
Axon: a fiber that conducts electronically signals away from the cell body to connections with other neurons
Terminal Buttons: found at the end of the axon, below the myelin sheath, and are responsible for sending the signal on to other neurons
Synapse: microscopic junctions between the axon terminal of one neuron and the dendritic branches of another
Development of Neurons
Neurogenesis: proliferation of neurons through cell division
Synaptic pruning: Unstimulated neurons leads to loss of synapses
Glial Cells: Cells in the nervous system which form a myelin sheath around certain axons
Form myelin sheath
Neural stem and progenitor cells during prenatal brain development
Protect the brain when injured by multiplying
Myelianation: increase in brain size
Cerebral Cortex
Fronal Lobe
Primary Motor Cortex
Premotor Area
Motor Speech Area (Broca’s Area)
Prefrontal Area
Temporal Lobe
Primary Auditory Cortex
Auditory Association Area
Sensory Speech Area (Wernick’s Area)
Parietal Lobe
Primary Somatic Sensory Cortex
Taste Area
Occiputal Lobe
Visual Assosiation Area
Visual Cortex
Lateralization
Two seperate halves of cerebral cortex
Communicate through corpus callosum
Specialized for different modes of processing
Left: Controls right side of body, verbal abilities, positive emotion
Right: Controls left side of body, spatial abilities, negative emotion
Plasticity: Capacity of brain to be changed by experience
Experience-Expectant: The role of ordinary experiences in shaping brain development and learning
Depends on timing during sensitive periods when brain is especially sensitive to certain stimuli
Experience-Dependent: When neural connections are created and reorganized throughout life as a result of experiences
Not depending on timing
Nutrition and Growth
Secular Trends: marked changed in physical development that have occured over generations
Better nutrition over time
Mentrating Earler
Food Neophobia: young children’s unwillingness to eat unfamailar foods
Treat it through slow food exposure to a variety of foods on a repeated basis
Undernutrition: not getting enough to eat
Marasmus: Little calories and nutrition
Kwashiorkor: Enough calories, but little nutrition
Undernutrition → lower immunity → increased risk of disease → infectious diseased → increased energy need → undernutrition
Failure to Thrive: a condition in which infants become malnourished and fail to grow or gain weight
Organic: Medical cause
Non-Organic: inability to produce breast milk, lack of affection, lack of stimulation
Reflexes: Innate, fixed responses to particular stimulation
Functions of reflexes
Survival or evolutionarily adaptive function
Important for feeding or endearing newborn to caregivers
Developmet of motor skills
Survival Reflexes: Stay with infant into development
Primitive Reflexes: Relfexes that disapear over time
Abnormal reflexes signal damage to the cerebral cortex
Types of Reflexes
Eyeblinking: Light or noise stimulous causes babies to quickly close eyes
Survival
Rooting: Stroking cheek near corner of mouth leads to head turning towards stimulus
Primitive - 3 weeks
Sucking: Place finger in infant’s mouth leads to sucking rhythmically
Primitive - 4 Months
Swimming: Place infant face down in water leads to paddles/kicks in swimming motion
Primitive - 4 to 6 Months
Moro: Hold infant on back and let head drop leads to embracing motion
Primitive - 6 Months
Palmar Grasp: Place finger in infant’s hand and press leads to grab of finger
Primitive - 3 to 4 Months
Tonic Neck: Baby’s head to one side while on back leads to fencing position
Primitive - 4 Months
Stepping: Hold infant under arms and permit feet to touch leads to stepping position
Primitive - 2 Months depending on weight
Babinski: Stroke sole of foot from toe toward heel leads to toes fanning out and curling as foot twists in
Motor Development
Cephalcocaudal Trend: Development proceeds from head to tail
Proximodistal Trend: Development proceeds from center of body outward
Cultural Factors
Suharan Africa - Limb manipulation though singing, bounching, stretching, and positive affect to make the baby stronger
Early Theories
Believed infants’ motor development is governed by brain maturation
Current Theories
Dynamic Systems Approach: Motor development as resulting from confluence of:
Development of nervous system
Movement capacities (increases in strength, posture control, balance, and perceptual skills)
Goal in mind (motivation)
Environmental supports
Gross Motor Development
Sit, head steady - 4 months
Sit, unsupported - 7 months
Pull to stand - 10 months
Stand alone - 14 months
Walk well - 15 months
Walk backward - 17 months
Run - 20 months
Jump up - 29 months
Fine Motor Development
Reaching
Pre-Reaching Movements: Clumsy swiping movements by newborns toward general vicinity of objects they see
Stable Reaching (7 months): when infants sit independently
Grasping
Ulnar Grasp (3 to 4 Months): Pressing fingers against palm
Pincer Grasp (9 months): Well-coordinated use of thumb and forefinger
Habitiation and Recovery
Habitation: A gradual reduction in the strength of a response due to repeated or continued stimulation
Highly adaptive
Varies in infants
Bilingual babies have enhanved sensitivity to certain features of communication such as tone of voice
Statistical Learning
Certain events and objects appear at the same time and place
EX: Recognizing a Mom’s voice and face
Newborns look at this in music, action, speech, etc.
Avaliable at birth
Prefer variability over patterns that are very complex
Classical Conditioning: a form of learning that consists of associating an initially neutral stimulus with a stimulus that always evokes a particular relexive response
Unconditioned stimulus (UCS): reliably elciits an unleaderned response
Unconditioned stimulus response (UCR): the response from the UCS
Conditioned Stimulus (CS): an initally neutral stimulus
Conditioned Response (CR): the original reflexive response becomes a learned behavior triggered by exposure to the CS
EX: A baby’s mouth makes contact with a bottle eliciting the sucking reflex and the infant experiences satisfaction. Now, the baby with begin the sucking reflex when it sees a bottle.
The bottle in the infant’s mouth: UCS
Sucking reflex: UCR
The bottle: CS
Anticipatory sucking movements: CR
Little Albert
A baby wasn’t scared of white rats until it was paired with loud noises. Then, the baby became scared of white rats
Operant Conditioning: Learning the relation between your behavior and the consequences that result from it
Reinforcement: Increase the occurence of a response
Punishment: decrease the occurence of a response
Positive reinforcement: a reward that reliably follows a behavior and increases the likelihood that the behavior will be repeated
Context dependent: Infants memory for operant responses is context dependent (must be tested in same setting
Improves after 9 months when baby becomes context free
Imitation: Learning by copying the behavior of another person
Functions
Allows infants to explore their social world
Allows adults to reinforce desirable behaviors
Facilitates parent-child attachment
Meltzoff Study
Infants as young as two days old easily imitate adult facial expressions
Aristotle
Goodness of fit: Concerned with fitting child rearing to needs of individual child
Empiricist View
Wrote about periods of childhood development
From 4th Century B.C.
Plato
Self control and discipline
Nativist View
From 4th Century B.C.
Medieval Period
Preformationism: Humans are preformed at instant creation (homunculus)
Effects
Caused people to view kids as mini-adults
Kids worked
Reformation Period
Puritan Doctrine
Kids tainted by original sin
Kids born evil and stubborn
Harsh and strict parenting
Must become civilized
Enlightenment Period
John Locke
Nurture View
Tabula Rasa: Blank Slate
Rational Tutoring: First discipline, then increase freedom
Believed in rewards and positive attention
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Noble Savage: Innate goodness
Nature View
Maximum Freedom
Permissive-parenting approach
Industrial Revolution Period
Social Reform
Working condition for kids
First Labor Laws
First Child Studies
Prussia 1839
Britain’s Factory Act 1839
Earl of Shaftesbury
1938 - First US federal law
Charles Darwin
Born in 1809, died in 1882
1877: Published “A Biological Sketch of an Infant”
On son, William, “Dottie”
Very Detailed
Theory of Evolution
Influences research on attachment, innate fears, etc
Nature and Nurture
Nature: Focus on Genetics
Nurture: Focus on Environments
Looks at the interaction of both
Epigenetics: the study of stable changes in gene expression that are mediated by the environment
Methylation: a biochemical process that reduces expression of a variety of genes and is involved in regulating reactions to stress.
Continuity and Discontinuity
Continuity: a gradual increase of skills over time
ie: A pine tree growing taller and taller
Discontinuity: a sudden qualitative changes with plateaus
ie: caterpillar to cocoon to butterfly
Stage theories: development occurs in a progression of distinct age-related stages
Conservation of Liquid Example
Discontinuous: ages seem qualitatively different
Mechanisms of Development
Mediators: one variable contributes to development by way of its effect on another variable
Relationship dynamics → quality → mental health in children
Moderators: one variable influences the impact of another variable on development
stress → depression, social support ⬆
Sociocultural Context
Cross-cultural comparisons
Practices that are rare or nonexistent in one culture are common in others
Newborns have own room, in other countries babies sleep in parents bed for a few years
Socioeconomic status: a measure of social class that is based on income and education
Kids in US live reasonably comfortable circumstances, but many do not
Kids in poorer families do less well than other kids
Infancy health problems
Less brain surface area
More likely to drop out/ teen pregnancy
Cumulative risk: the accumulation of the socioeconomic disadvantages over years of development which is the biggest obstacle to poor children’s successful development.
Scientific Method
Steps
Choosing a research question to be answered
Formatting a hypothesis: testable predictions
Developing a method to test hypothesis
Use data to draw conclusion
Reliability
Consistency
Variability means errors
Interrater reliability: Two independent observers rate and compare
looks for correlation
Test-retest reliability: testing twice, over time, to see if theres a similar result
Validity
Accuracy
Internal validity: effects observed within experiments can be attributed with confidence to the factor that the researcher is testing
independent’s variable’s impact
too many confounding variables
External validity: the ability to generalize research findings beyond the particulars of the research in question
real world condition
Research Methods
Clinical Interviews: flexible interview in which researcher obtains full account of participant’s thoughts
Benefits: Depth in little time
Limitations: Subject to inaccuracy, hard for kids
Structured Interviews and Questionnaires: Self-report instruments in which each participants is asked the same way.
EX: Likard scale (rating from 1 → 5)
Benefits: Permits comparison & efficiently collects and scores data
Limitations: Social desirability, doesn’t yield as much info as clinical interview, tough for kids
Naturalistic Observation: Researchers observes in a background setting
Benefits: Minimizes presence influence
Limitation: Hard to control, occasionally in everyday environment
Structured Observation: Observed behaviors in a lab
Benefits: Equal opportunity to display behavior
Limitations: Lack of external validity, observer influence & bias
Correlation Design: Indicates how two variables are related
Correlation Coefficient
Represented by “r” symbol
direction and strength
+1.00 - -1.00
Directionality Problem: a correlation does not indicate which variable is the cause and which variable is the effect.
Doesn’t indicate what causes what
Third Variable Problem: the correlation between two variables may be the result of some third, unspecified variable
Experimental Design: Permits cause and effect inferences
Random Assignment: assigning participants to one experimental group or another according to chance
Experimental Control: the ability of the researcher to determine the specific experiences that children in each group encounter during the study
Experimental Group: The group that is being tested/ experience of interest
Control Group: Group treated identically except that they are not presented the experience of interest
Independent Variable: Manipulated by researchers
Dependent Variable: Outcome expected to be influenced by IV
Developmental Research Designs
Cross-Sectional: Same participants from different age groups tested over some general period of time
Benefits: Yields useful data about differences among age groups, quick and easy to administer
Limitations: Uninformative about stability of individual differences over time, uninformative about similarities
Time Lag: Groups are tested at the same age, but at different times
Benefits: Addresses the potential effects of time
Limitations: Cohort but not directionality problem
Longitudinal: a set of participants tested at several different ages
Benefits: Indicates the degree of stability of individual differences over long periods, reveals individual children’s patterns of children’s patterns of change of long periods of time
Limitations: selective attrition, bias sampling, practice effects, cohort effects
Sequential: Several different age groups over several different age groups
Benefits: Combines all, rules out cohort and time
Limitations: Takes very long
Microgenetic: Children observed intensively over a relatively short period while a change is occurring.
Benefits: Intensive observation while change is occurring, reveals individual change patterns over short periods in detail
Limitations: does not provide info about typical patterns of change over long periods of time, does not yield data regarding change patterns over long periods.
Conception
Epigenesis: the emergence of new structures and functions during development
Widely accepted
Contrasts preformationism
published by Aristotle
Gametes: reproductive cells (egg & sperm) that contain only half genetic material of all cells
Haploid Cell
Meiosis: Cell division that produces gametes
23 Chromosomes from Mom and 23 from Dad
Occurs from birth for girls, during puberty for boys
Zygote: fertilized egg cell
diploid cell
46 chromosomes in 23 pairs
Germinal Period: From conception to 2 weeks
Blastocyst: inner mass and trophoblast
Trophoblast grows into placenta
Neural Tube
U-shaped grooves move together and fuse to create the neural tube
Will develop into the brain
Embryonic Disk
Forms three cell layers at weeks 3-4
Ectoderm: nervous system and skin
Mesoderm: muscles, skeletons, circulatory system
Endoderm: digestive system, lungs, urinary tract, gland
Placenta: a rich network of blood vessels, weighing roughly one pound, that extends into the tissues of the mother’s uterus
Semipermeable: permits the exchange of materials carried in the bloodstreams of the fetus and its mother, but prevents the blood of the mother and fetus from mixing
Chorion: a membrane that surrounds a developing fetus in conjunction with the amnion
Amnion (amnionic sac): the fetal membrane the directly surrounds the fetus
protects the baby from the mother’s body, provides nutrients, immunity, waste removal, and gas exchange
Embryonic Period
Mitosis: Cell division
Cell migration: the movement of newly formed cells away from their point of origin
Neurons deep inside brains travel to outer levels of the developing brain
Cell differentiation: Cells start to specialize after mitosis and become distinguished from one another
Apoptosis: Cell death
Ex: cells in the hand die to make room for fingers
Hormonal Influences
Sex differentiation
Androgens leads to testosterone leads to male genitalia
Steroids limit fetal growth and help fetal tissues mature
glucocorticoids
End of gestation, fetus increase production to mature key organs that are needed outside of the womb
Cephalocaudal Development: development takes place at a more rapid pace than later development and that the areas nearer the head develop earlier than those far away
Rapid organ growth
Weeks 5-8
Week by Week breakdown
Week 3: Embryo forms three layers, neural tube develops
Week 4: Neural tube develops into brain and spinal cord, heart is visible, legs and arm buds are visible
Weeks 5-9: Facial features differentiate, rapid brain growth, internal organs form, fingers and toes emerge, sex differentiation
Fetal Period
Week by Week breakdown
Week 10-12: Heart develops basic adult structures, spine and ribs develop, brain forms major divisions
Week 13-24: Lower body growth accelerates, external genitalia, body develops hairy outer covering, basic facial expressions, fetal movements felt
Weeks 25-38: Triples in size, brain and lungs fully developed at 28 weeks, visual and auditory systems work, fetus can learn and behaviors emerge
Vernix: a white, creamy film covering the skin of the fetus
Provides immune, temperature control, and moisturization, protects from amniotic fluid
Lanugo: Fine, soft, hair on the skin of the baby
protects from amniotic fluid
Age of viability: Between 22-26 weeks where a fetus can survive if born early
Last 3rd of 1st trimester: baby can kick, suck thumb, swallow
Habitation: a decrease in response to repeated or continued stimulation
Dishabituation: a perceptible change occurs, it becomes interesting again
Hazards to Prenatal Development
Critical Period: When a particular type of growth must happen
Sensitive Period: When a certain type of development is most likely to happen but may happen later
Teratogens: A potentially harmful agent
Dose-response relation: the greater the fetus’s exposure to a potential teratogen, the more likely it is that the fetus will suffer damage and the more severe any damage is likely to be
Sleeper Effects: The impact of a given agent may not be apparent for many years
DES Example: Diethylstibestrol (DES) used to prevent miscarriage doesn’t effect babies but theres elivated risk of cervicle and testicular cancer in adolescence and adulthood
Antidepressent Effects
Can help reduce postpartum depression
Inconclusive if its bad for fetus
Smoking Effects
Fewer breathing movement while smoking
Metabolize cancer causing agents
Low birth weight
Limb malformation
SIDS
ADHD
Low IQ
Cancer
Critical period: 4-6 Weeks
Alcohol Effects
Growth Stunts
Mental Stunts
Low birth weight
ADHD
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
Facial characteristics
Intellectual disabilities
Attention Problems
Hyperactivity
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS): A suddent death of a baby younger than age 1 that does not have a known cause.
Maternal Age
Mothers 15 and Under
3-4x more likely to die before their first birthday
Geratric Pregnancy: 35 or older
Risk for autism and chromosomal disorders
Effects of Malnutrition
Effects growth of fetal brain
Lack of Folic Acid
Spinal Bifida
Neural tube defects
Premature brain
Attention issues
Effects of Rubella
Major malformations
Deafness
Blindness
Intellectual Disabilities
Effects of STIs
Cytomegalovirus (CMV): Type of herpes
Central nervous system damage
Hearing loss
Blindness
Death
Damages fetal CNS
HIV
Can be passed onto kid through birth and breast milk
Effects of Infections
Zika: a mosquito borne viral infection
Can cause microcephaly which makes a babies head smaller than expected
hearing loss
vision loss due to seizures
intellectual disability
First trimestor of pregnancy
Paracites
tocoplasmosis
Leads to an increased chance in schizophrenia
Birth
Corticotrophin-Releasing Hormone: Truggers release of other hormoes to start birth process
Estrogen
Oxytocin
Cortisol
Childbirth Approaches
Shared Goals: Safeguarding health of mother and child, social integration of child
Differences: Public vs. Private event, Home vs. Hospital, Standing vs. Laying
APGAR Scale
Goal: To see if extra medical care or emergency care right after a babies birth
A - Appearnace
Blue = 0
Pink body, blue arms & legs = 1
Pink = 2
P - Pulse
No heartbeat = 0
<100 bpm = 1
100-140 bpm = 2
G - Grimace
No reflex = 0
Weak reflex = 1
Strong reflex = 2
A - Activity
Limp = 0
Weak arm/leg movement = 1
Strong arm/leg movement = 2
R - Respiration
No breaking for 60 seconds = 0
Irregular shallow breathing = 1
Strong breathing & crying = 2
Predicitve ability
A score of 7+ is good and means no intervention is needed, any less there may be issues and intervention may be needed
State of Arousal
States: Level of Arousal and engagements ranges from deep sleep to intense activity
Quiet Sleep: 8 hours
Active Sleep: 8 hours
Alert Awake: 2 ½ hours
Active Awake: 2 ½ hours
Drowsing: 1 hour
Crying: 2 hours
Sleeping
Newborns sleep twice as much as adults
50% of sleep in newborns, declines by 20% by age 3 through 5
REM vs. Non-REM sleep
REM (Rapid eye movement)
Active sleep: Quick, jerky eye movements (myoclonic twitching)
Stimulation leads to central nervous system growth
Dreaming
Non-REM sleep
Deep Sleep: absense of motor activity
Slower brain waves, breathing and heart rate
Techniques
Graduated Extinction: parents slowly increased their delays in responding to their infant crying
no effects on infant stress
Extinction: putting a baby in their crib fully awake and allowing them to fuss or cry until they falls asleep — without help from the parent
decreases in nocturnal wakefulness
Crying
Why Infants Cry
Communication, hungry, temperature change, noise, pain
Adult responsiveness
Physiological arousal and psychological disconmfort
Effects the periacueductal grey of the midbrain
What to do when infants cry
1st - Feeding
2nd - Rocking, swaddling, pacifier, gentle rhythmic motion, massage
3rd - let baby cry it out for a short period
Parental Responsiveness
Ethological perspective: responsiveness means needs are met
parent teaches ways to communicate
Behaviorist perspective: consistent responding reinforces crying responses
Developmental perspective: crying is normal and babies are independent of parental responsiveness
Heightened at 3 months and in the evening
Colic: Crying for no apparent reason during the first few months of life
Causes unknown
May be caused by allergic responses
1 in 10 infants have colic
Ends by 3 month
Low birth weight: Infants who weigh less than 5 ½ pounds
Causes: prematurity, teratogens, pollution, multiple births
Long term outcomes: Neurosensory deficits, frequent illness, lower IQ scores, lower educational achievement
Prematurity: A baby born at 35 weeks or earlier after conceptions
Causes: Pollution
Small for Gestational Age: Weighing substancially less than normal at either preterm or full-term for their gestational age based on weeks since conception
Skin to skin contact: A baby is laid directly on mothers’ bare chest after birth, both of them covered in a warm blanket and left for at least an hour after the first feed
Kangaroo care: Caregivers act as incubators to help maintain infants’ skin temperature and to promote breast-feeding
Genotype: inherited genetic material
Phenotype: the observable expression of the genotype, including both body characterisitcs and behavior
Chromosomes: long threatlike molecules made up of two twisted strands of DNA
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid): the carrier of all the biochemical instructions involved in the formation and functioning of an organism
Genes: the basic unit of heredity in all living theme
Alleles: Two or more different forms of genes
Homozygous: Two dominant or two recessive gene
Heterozygous: Two different alleles—one dominant and the other recessive
Regulator Genes: Genes that control the activity of other genes
Turns on and off genes
If one is inactivated, another one is turned on
Patterns of Inheritance: Transmission of genetic material from parent to offspring
Dominant Recessive: Heterozygous conditions, influence of only once allele
Domiant allele affects phenotype
Reccesive allele has no effect, unless paired with another reccesive allele
Carriers: Heterozygous individuals who can pass recessive traits to offspring
Recessive Gene Disorders
Phenylketonuria (PKU): a disorder on chromosome 12 that comes from both parents who cannot metabolize phenylalanine. This causes impared brain development and intellecutal disabilities.
X-Linked: a recessive gene carried on the X chromosome
Males more likely to be afftected (colorblindness and hemophilia)
Codominance: Both alleles in a heterozygous combination are expressed
Mutation: Sudden, permanent change in a DNA segment
Polygenic Inheritance: Genes that individually exert a small effect
Traits show gradations
Chromosomal and Gene Anomalies: Errors in cell division can result in zygotes with extra or missing chromosomes or genes
Chromosomal
Down Syndrome
XYY Syndrome
Klinefelter Syndrome (XXY)
Triple X Syndrome
Turner Syndrome (X0)
Gene
Williams syndrome
Norm of Reaction: All phenotypes can theoretically result from a given genotype in relation to all the environment in which it can survive/develop
Genetic-Environment Interaction: Inherited vulnerability and specific environmental conditions are needed to produce a disorder
Also known as the Diathesis-Stress Model
EX: PKU
High Phenmylaline Foods vs. Low Phenmylaline Foods
Reciprocal Gene-Envrionement: Those with a genetic predisposition for a disorder may also have a genetic tendency to create environmental risk factors that promote the disorder
Behavior Genetics
Heritability: Extent to which variability in a particular behavior in a population
0.0 to 1.0; higher number, greater heritability
Population not individual
Shared Environmental Factors: what family members have in common
Nonshared Environmental Factors: what is distinct among family members
Research Designs
Family Study: Determines whether phenotypic traits are correlated with the degree to which people are genetically related
Parents and Children
Identical and Fraternal twins
Non-twin siblings or adpotive family members
Twin Study: Compares correlation for identical (monozygotic or MZ) twins with those for same-sex fraternal (dizygotic or DZ) twins.
Chorionicty: difference in the degree of placental sharing
Adoption study: Examines whether adopted children’s scores on a given measure are correlated more highly with those of their biological parents and siblings or with those of their adoptive parents and siblings
Neuron: Cells of the nervous system
Cell Body: the basic biological material that keeps the neuron functioning
Dendrites: fibers that recieve input from other cells and conduct it toward the cell body in the form of elelctrical impulses
Spines: tiny protrusions from dendrites, which form functional contacts with neighboring axons of other neurons
Axon: a fiber that conducts electronically signals away from the cell body to connections with other neurons
Terminal Buttons: found at the end of the axon, below the myelin sheath, and are responsible for sending the signal on to other neurons
Synapse: microscopic junctions between the axon terminal of one neuron and the dendritic branches of another
Development of Neurons
Neurogenesis: proliferation of neurons through cell division
Synaptic pruning: Unstimulated neurons leads to loss of synapses
Glial Cells: Cells in the nervous system which form a myelin sheath around certain axons
Form myelin sheath
Neural stem and progenitor cells during prenatal brain development
Protect the brain when injured by multiplying
Myelianation: increase in brain size
Cerebral Cortex
Fronal Lobe
Primary Motor Cortex
Premotor Area
Motor Speech Area (Broca’s Area)
Prefrontal Area
Temporal Lobe
Primary Auditory Cortex
Auditory Association Area
Sensory Speech Area (Wernick’s Area)
Parietal Lobe
Primary Somatic Sensory Cortex
Taste Area
Occiputal Lobe
Visual Assosiation Area
Visual Cortex
Lateralization
Two seperate halves of cerebral cortex
Communicate through corpus callosum
Specialized for different modes of processing
Left: Controls right side of body, verbal abilities, positive emotion
Right: Controls left side of body, spatial abilities, negative emotion
Plasticity: Capacity of brain to be changed by experience
Experience-Expectant: The role of ordinary experiences in shaping brain development and learning
Depends on timing during sensitive periods when brain is especially sensitive to certain stimuli
Experience-Dependent: When neural connections are created and reorganized throughout life as a result of experiences
Not depending on timing
Nutrition and Growth
Secular Trends: marked changed in physical development that have occured over generations
Better nutrition over time
Mentrating Earler
Food Neophobia: young children’s unwillingness to eat unfamailar foods
Treat it through slow food exposure to a variety of foods on a repeated basis
Undernutrition: not getting enough to eat
Marasmus: Little calories and nutrition
Kwashiorkor: Enough calories, but little nutrition
Undernutrition → lower immunity → increased risk of disease → infectious diseased → increased energy need → undernutrition
Failure to Thrive: a condition in which infants become malnourished and fail to grow or gain weight
Organic: Medical cause
Non-Organic: inability to produce breast milk, lack of affection, lack of stimulation
Reflexes: Innate, fixed responses to particular stimulation
Functions of reflexes
Survival or evolutionarily adaptive function
Important for feeding or endearing newborn to caregivers
Developmet of motor skills
Survival Reflexes: Stay with infant into development
Primitive Reflexes: Relfexes that disapear over time
Abnormal reflexes signal damage to the cerebral cortex
Types of Reflexes
Eyeblinking: Light or noise stimulous causes babies to quickly close eyes
Survival
Rooting: Stroking cheek near corner of mouth leads to head turning towards stimulus
Primitive - 3 weeks
Sucking: Place finger in infant’s mouth leads to sucking rhythmically
Primitive - 4 Months
Swimming: Place infant face down in water leads to paddles/kicks in swimming motion
Primitive - 4 to 6 Months
Moro: Hold infant on back and let head drop leads to embracing motion
Primitive - 6 Months
Palmar Grasp: Place finger in infant’s hand and press leads to grab of finger
Primitive - 3 to 4 Months
Tonic Neck: Baby’s head to one side while on back leads to fencing position
Primitive - 4 Months
Stepping: Hold infant under arms and permit feet to touch leads to stepping position
Primitive - 2 Months depending on weight
Babinski: Stroke sole of foot from toe toward heel leads to toes fanning out and curling as foot twists in
Motor Development
Cephalcocaudal Trend: Development proceeds from head to tail
Proximodistal Trend: Development proceeds from center of body outward
Cultural Factors
Suharan Africa - Limb manipulation though singing, bounching, stretching, and positive affect to make the baby stronger
Early Theories
Believed infants’ motor development is governed by brain maturation
Current Theories
Dynamic Systems Approach: Motor development as resulting from confluence of:
Development of nervous system
Movement capacities (increases in strength, posture control, balance, and perceptual skills)
Goal in mind (motivation)
Environmental supports
Gross Motor Development
Sit, head steady - 4 months
Sit, unsupported - 7 months
Pull to stand - 10 months
Stand alone - 14 months
Walk well - 15 months
Walk backward - 17 months
Run - 20 months
Jump up - 29 months
Fine Motor Development
Reaching
Pre-Reaching Movements: Clumsy swiping movements by newborns toward general vicinity of objects they see
Stable Reaching (7 months): when infants sit independently
Grasping
Ulnar Grasp (3 to 4 Months): Pressing fingers against palm
Pincer Grasp (9 months): Well-coordinated use of thumb and forefinger
Habitiation and Recovery
Habitation: A gradual reduction in the strength of a response due to repeated or continued stimulation
Highly adaptive
Varies in infants
Bilingual babies have enhanved sensitivity to certain features of communication such as tone of voice
Statistical Learning
Certain events and objects appear at the same time and place
EX: Recognizing a Mom’s voice and face
Newborns look at this in music, action, speech, etc.
Avaliable at birth
Prefer variability over patterns that are very complex
Classical Conditioning: a form of learning that consists of associating an initially neutral stimulus with a stimulus that always evokes a particular relexive response
Unconditioned stimulus (UCS): reliably elciits an unleaderned response
Unconditioned stimulus response (UCR): the response from the UCS
Conditioned Stimulus (CS): an initally neutral stimulus
Conditioned Response (CR): the original reflexive response becomes a learned behavior triggered by exposure to the CS
EX: A baby’s mouth makes contact with a bottle eliciting the sucking reflex and the infant experiences satisfaction. Now, the baby with begin the sucking reflex when it sees a bottle.
The bottle in the infant’s mouth: UCS
Sucking reflex: UCR
The bottle: CS
Anticipatory sucking movements: CR
Little Albert
A baby wasn’t scared of white rats until it was paired with loud noises. Then, the baby became scared of white rats
Operant Conditioning: Learning the relation between your behavior and the consequences that result from it
Reinforcement: Increase the occurence of a response
Punishment: decrease the occurence of a response
Positive reinforcement: a reward that reliably follows a behavior and increases the likelihood that the behavior will be repeated
Context dependent: Infants memory for operant responses is context dependent (must be tested in same setting
Improves after 9 months when baby becomes context free
Imitation: Learning by copying the behavior of another person
Functions
Allows infants to explore their social world
Allows adults to reinforce desirable behaviors
Facilitates parent-child attachment
Meltzoff Study
Infants as young as two days old easily imitate adult facial expressions