1 / 18

Developmental Psychology

Developmental Psychology. Prenatal Development and the Newborn. Teratogens – harmful agents like viruses or drugs that affect a developing fetus HIV, heroin, nicotine, alcohol. Newborns experience habituation : a decrease in responding with repeated stimulation

diata
Download Presentation

Developmental Psychology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Developmental Psychology

  2. Prenatal Development and the Newborn • Teratogens – harmful agents like viruses or drugs that affect a developing fetus • HIV, heroin, nicotine, alcohol

  3. Newborns experience habituation: a decrease in responding with repeated stimulation • More often a newborn sees something, the less interested he is

  4. Infancy and Childhood • Brain cells are developed at birth, but neural networks grow with age • Motor development sequence (roll over, crawl, walk) is universal • Individual differences in timing • Infantile amnesia – our memories seldom predate our 3rd birthday

  5. Cognitive development • Brain builds schemas or mental molds of our experiences • We assimilate or interpret new experiences in terms of existing schemas • Thinking all 4-legged animals are cows • We accommodate or adjust schemas to incorporate info from new experiences • Creating a cow category

  6. Jean Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development • Sensorimotor stage – birth to age 2 • Know the world through senses and motor activities • Young infants lack object permanence – awareness that objects continue to exist when not perceived

  7. Piaget -cont- • Preoperational stage – age 2 - 6 or 7 • Learns to use language but doesn’t understand logic • Doesn’t understand conservation – mass, volume and number stay the same despite changes in form • Pouring milk from a tall to a short container

  8. Piaget -cont- • Egocentric – difficulty in taking another’s point of view • Age 4 or 5 begin to develop theory of mind – ability to infer others’ mental states

  9. Piaget -cont- • Concrete Operational Stage – 6 or 7 years to 11 or 12 • Begin to think logically • Understands conservation and mathematical transformations

  10. Formal Operational Stage – begins around age 12 • Begin to think logically about abstract concepts

  11. Infant Social Development • 8 months: develop stranger anxiety – fear of strangers • Attachment bond • Secure attachment - 60% of infants in a “strange situation” play in mom’s presence, become upset when she leaves, seek contact w/her when she returns and calm down • Insecure attachment – less likely to explore, cling to mom, cry or remain indifferent when she leaves

  12. Parenting Styles • Authoritarian – impose rules and expect obedience • Can result in less social skill and self-esteem • Permissive – give in; make few demands and use little punishment • Can result in aggression and immaturity • Authoritative – demanding and responsive; set rules but explain reasons behind them • Can result in high self-esteem, self-reliance and social competence • Correlation is not causation • Children’s traits may influence parenting more than vice versa

  13. Gender development • Nature of gender • Sex hormones influence fetal brain’s wiring • Baby boys are more physically active than girls • Toddler girls talk one month earlier on average • Boys seem more spatially aware

  14. Nurture of Gender • Gender roles – set of expected behaviors for males and females • Social learning theory – theory that we learn social behavior by observing and imitating and being rewarded or punished

  15. Men Women • Directive leadership style • More likely to give opinions • More independent • Less religious • Admit to more aggression • Socially dominant • Democratic leadership style • More likely to give support • More interdependent • More spiritual

  16. ADULTHOOD • Diminishing of muscle strength, visual sharpness, hearing and smell • More susceptible to life-threatening ailments but less susceptibility to short-term ailments • Slower neural processing

  17. Intelligence • Crystallized intelligence - accumulated knowledge as reflected in vocabulary and analogies tests • Increases in old age • Fluid intelligence - ability to reason speedily and abstractly • Decreases slowly to age 75ish, and then more rapidly

  18. Social Development • Love • Cohabitation before marriage results in higher rates of divorce • Tend to be initially less committed to lasting marriage and become less marriage-supporting while cohabitating • Lasting marriages have 5:1 ratio of positive to negative interactions • Happiness is slightly higher among young and older adults than those in middle age

More Related