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Research Methodologies. cross-sectional: Examining groups of subjects who are of different ages. longitudinal: Examining the same group of subjects two or more times as they age.
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Research Methodologies • cross-sectional: Examining groups of subjects who are of different ages. • longitudinal: Examining the same group of subjects two or more times as they age. • biographical: Studying developmental changes by reconstructing subjects’ past through interviews and investigating the effects of past events on current behaviors.
Advantages inexpensive relatively quick to complete no high attrition rate Cross-Sectional Studies Disadvantages • different age groups may be dissimilar • age and maturity may not be equivalent • confounds cohort and age differences
Advantages detailed info. about subjects provides great detail of developmental changes follows same cohort groups Longitudinal Studies Disadvantages • expensive and time-consuming • potential for high attrition rates • may confound age differences & differences in assessment tools
Advantages rich detail about one individual’s life allows for in-depth study of one individual Biographical Studies Disadvantages • individual’s recall is often untrustworthy • can be very time-consuming and expensive
Prenatal Development • prenatal development: Development from conception to birth. • embryo: 2 weeks after conception to 3 months. • fetus: 3 months after conception to birth.
Importance of the Placenta • The organ by which an embryo or fetus is attached to its mother’s uterus and that nourishes it during prenatal development. • The effects of alcohol and smoking by the mother readily cross the placenta.
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) • Heavy alcohol consumption by the mother during pregnancy results in facial deformities, heart defects, stunted growth, and cognitive impairments.
Neonate Reflexes • rooting reflex: A baby turns its head toward something touching its cheek and gropes around with its mouth. • sucking reflex: Sucking on any object placed in a baby’s mouth. • swallowing reflex: Enables the neonate to swallow liquids without choking.
Neonate Reflexes • grasping reflex: Neonates close their fists on anything that is placed in their hands. • stepping reflex: The light stepping motions made by neonates if they are held upright with their feet just touching a surface.
Temperament The physical/emotional characteristics of the newborn child and young infant.
3 Types of Temperaments (Thomas & Chess) • easy: good-natured and adaptable, easy to care for and please • difficult: moody and intense, reacting to new people and new situations negatively and strongly • “slow-to-warm-up”: relatively inactive and slow to respond to new things, and when they do react, their reactions are mild
Visual Preferences of Infants • novel picture or pattern • picture/pattern with clear contrasts (e.g., black and white patterns) • their own mother rather than a stranger
Depth Perception (Visual Cliff Studies) • Crawling babies will not cross over onto deep side. • babies too young to crawl: no anxiety, but do demonstrate depth perception • 2-4 months old: begin to perceive patterns, objects, and depth
Developmental Trends • cephalocaudal: Development occurs in areas near the head (cephalo) first and areas farther from the head develop later (caudal means tail). • proximodistal: Development occurs near the center of the body (proximal) first and near the extremities (distal) later.
Developmental Trends • gross to specific development: Children tend to gain control of gross (large muscle) movement before they gain control of specific (or fine motor control) movement.
Cognitive Development (Piaget) • sensory-motor stage (birth-2) • preoperational stage (2-7) • concrete operations (7-11) • formal operations (11-15)
Sensory-Motor Stage (birth to 2 years) • object permanence: The concept that things continue to exist even when they are out of sight. • mental representations: Mental images or symbols (such as words) used to think about or remember an object, a person, or an event.
Preoperational Stage (2 to 7 years) • A child becomes able to use mental representations and language to describe, remember, and reason about the world. • egocentric: Unable to see things from another person’s point of view.
Concrete-Operational Stage (7 to 11 years) • A child can attend to more than one thing at a time and understand someone else’s point of view, though thinking is limited to concrete matters. • A child can understand conservation.
Principles of Conservation The concept that basic amounts remain constant despite superficial changes in appearances.
Formal-Operational Stage (11 to 15 years) The individual becomes capable of abstract thought.
Criticisms of Piaget’s Theory • Piaget underestimated the cognitive ability of infants. • Cognitive milestones are reached sooner than Piaget believed. • He did not take the role of social interaction into account. • His theory does not address human diversity.