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Janet Belsky’s Experiencing the Lifespan, 2e. Chapter 3: Infancy: Physical and Cognitive Development. Meredyth Fellows, West Chester University of PA. Postpartum Depression. _______________________
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Janet Belsky’sExperiencing the Lifespan, 2e Chapter 3: Infancy: Physical and Cognitive Development Meredyth Fellows, West Chester University of PA
Postpartum Depression • _______________________ • Data from three states indicate that nearly 12% of women reported being moderately depressed after they delivered their baby, and 6% reported being very depressed after delivery. In addition to directly influencing the emotional wellbeing of mothers, postpartum depression (PPD) has been shown to affect marital relationships, mother–infant bonding, and infant behavior
The Expanding Brain:Blossoming and Sculpting • Brain Growth Following Birth • Experiences fastest growth during infancy • Cerebral cortex comes “on-line” a few months after birth • Cerebral Cortex: outer folded mantle of brain; responsible for thinking, reasoning, perceiving, and all conscious processes • In 20 years brain volume quadruples and growth is complete.
The Expanding Brain • Recall during fetal period neurons are formed • After birth, _______________ - proliferation of connections at the synapses • Exuberantsynaptogenesis and __________ • _________: formation of fatty layer encasing axons • Visual cortex myelinated by 1 year • Frontal lobes, age 20 or beyond
Neural Pruning and Plasticity: Interaction of Nature and Nurture • _________: the brain is “plastic” (malleable) during early childhood before pruning is complete • Following a brain injury or insult, plasticity allows other brain regions to compensate • Following childhood the brain is less plastic • Rehabilitation following a brain injury will help to compensate for the injury (e.g following a stroke).
Basic Newborn States: Reflexes • Reflexes: • Instinctive, automatic responses • Present at birth; promote survival • ____________________________________________________________
Nutrition: Breast Milk • Breast Milk: recommended for 1st six months • Protects from diseases • Correlational studies show that breast-fed babies: • are more alert during first two weeks • experience fewer gastrointestinal problems and ear infections • are more resistant to day care diseases, colds and flu • are advanced in developmental tasks as toddlers • appear to be superior in later measures of intelligence in elementary school (cautious assumption – next slide!)
Nutrition: Breast Milk • Breast Milk Studies: must consider 3rd variable – Social Class • Mothers from higher SES may have more opportunity to breast feed (lower SES mothers may have to work). • Health - premature babies may not have the opportunity • Health of the mother may deter breast feeding (HIV) • Social support and a culture that supports breast feeding are crucial factors in the choice to breast feed.
Crying: First Communication Signal • Crying: • Lifetime peak at about 5 weeks • Reflex dominated before the cortex is “on-line” at 4 months • Vital to survival (responsive parenting is a must!) • _________: frantic, continual crying during first 3 months • Caused by immature digestive system • Another expert’s suggestion: immature nervous system • May contribute to parental stress, but is temporary!
Intervention: What Quiets a Young Baby? • Pacifier • __________ • Mirrors womb • Kangaroo Care • Hold close to body in baby sling • Infant Massage • Helps to calm infants and contributes to growth in premature babies
Sleeping: Main Newborn State • Newborns, 18 hrs. a day • Note high % of sleep states: drowsy, quiet, and REM sleep • Unlike adult sleep cycle, newborns drop immediately into REM sleep • Newborns wake every 3-4 hours • 6 months, may sleep 6 hrs. a night • 1 year, 12 hrs. a night and naps during day
Sensory and Motor Development • Hearing • In the womb, fetuses can discriminate different tones • Smell • Infants prefer smell of breast milk within the first week • Taste: • Infants stop sucking and wrinkle face in response to bitter, sour, salty tastes • Avidly suck on sweet solutions • Pain management technique - have infant suck on sweet substance
Focusing on Faces • Newborns prefer faces to other stimuli, especially mother’s face • Prefer attractive-looking people • Infants mimic facial expressions
Depth Perception: the Visual Cliff Experiment • When 8 month-old babies begin to crawl they perceive differences in depth and fear heights. • Notice survival response! • Video Joe Campos
Cognitive Development: Piaget • Stage Approach • Studied his children • Schemas • Assimilation • Accommodation • Adaptation
Cognition • Sensorimotor Stage: birth to 2 • Explore world through senses • _______________ • Repetitive action-oriented schemas (habits) • Primary (body-centered), Secondary (environment), Tertiary (“little scientist”) • Through circular reactions, infant explores and incorporates new information into existing schemas
Sensorimotor Stage • Stage 1: reflexes 0-1 month • Proficiency at sucking, grasping • Lack ability to deliberately grasp or suck • Stage 2: primary circular reactions 1-4 months • Repetition of pleasurable behavior which occurs by chance (involves own body) • Stage 3: secondary circular reactions 4 – 8 months • Repetition of pleasurable behavior which occurs by chance, but involves deliberate manipulation of object in environment • Stage 4: purposeful coordination of secondary schemes 8-12months • Combinations of actions (leaning and grasping) (looking, crawling, grasping) • Stage 5: tertiary circular reactions 12 – 18 months • Exploration using new or novel actions • Formation of trial and error discovery • Stage 6: mental solutions 18 – 24 months • Thinking about problems to develop solutions • Internalization of trial and error • Accompanied by language formation
Tracking Early Thinking: Sensorimotor Stage • _____________: repeating an action observed at an early time • Means-end behavior: about 1 yr., performing a different action to reach a goal • Flushing something down the toilet! • ____________: even though a baby sees an object hidden in a 2nd hiding place, he/she goes back to the first hiding place to find it! • Classic mistake in Sensorimotor stage • Baby approaches 1 year (little-scientist stage)
Object-Permanence: Sensorimotor Stage • Understanding that objects exist even when we can no longer see them. • In the early Sensorimotor stage, an object does not exist unless the infant can see it! • Around 5-6 months, infants begin to look for hidden objects • About 8 months develops object-permanence (“little-scientist stage”) • Peek-a-Boo a favorite game!!
Sequence of Language Development • Prelinguistic Period • Crying at birth • _______(video) at 2 months • _________(video) at 6 months • Spoken Words- Video • Appears at about 10 months • Typically only a few words are known • By 18 months between 3 to 50 words • Two word utterances begin 18 to 24 months • _________(Video) appear at about 2 to 4 years
Language: Basic Principles • _________ language abilities outpace expressive language skills • Infant-directed speech • Higher pitched, elongated vowels, exaggerated tones • Attracts baby’s interest (heart rate deceleration evidence of baby’s interest)