Lifespan Development Chapter 4
Developmental Psychology A branch of psychology that studies physical, cognitive, and social change throughout the lifespan.
Developmental Stages Prenatal Development and Newborn Infancy and Childhood Adolescence Adulthood Biological and Cultural Notions of Gender Shaping Experience
Milestones A set of functional skills or age- specific tasks that most children can do at a certain age range. These can be physical, cognitive, emotional/social, or relating to communication.
Prenatal Development: Conception Fusion of the nucleus of a sperm and the nucleus of an egg to form a zygote
Conception 1 out of 200 million or more sperm 1 out of 5000 eggs Accounting for the age of the universe, the types of sperm, and the probability of sperm fertilizing eggs in your family generation, the chances you exist are… 1/1.8 X If you go back 1 million years, it would take 42 X universe lifetimes to make you. Essentially, the probability of you existing are virtually 0.
Prenatal: Conception to 2 weeks Zygote : a fertilized egg that undergoes 2 weeks of rapid cell division and develops into an embryo You began as 1 cell
Prenatal: 2 to 8 weeks Parts of the zygote become the embryo Embryo – the developing organism from about 2 weeks after fertilization through the second month Organs form and function and the heart begins to beat
Prenatal: 9 weeks to birth 9 weeks after conception the embryo looks human and is a fetus Fetus – the developing human organism from 9 weeks after conception to birth Fetus is responsive to sound atch?v=fKyljukBE70 atch?v=fKyljukBE70
Prenatal Development The placenta transfers nutrients and oxygen from mother to fetus and screens out potentially harmful substances Teratogens – harmful agents that can bypass the placenta and reach the embryo or fetus during prenatal development Ex) Viruses and chemicals (heroin, AIDS, nicotine, alcohol)
Prenatal Development Alcohol Can kill millions of fetal brain cells Enters the bloodstream and depresses central nervous system activity Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) Physical and cognitive abnormalities in children caused by a pregnant woman’s heavy drinking; in severe cases symptoms include noticeable facial misproportions
Prenatal Development A woman’s psychological state may affect her fetus Stress in rodents and primates can lead to delayed motor development, increased emotionality, learning deficits, and alterations in neurotransmitter systems Humans…?
Competent Newborns Newborns are equipped with reflexes Rooting reflex : a baby’s tendency, when touched on the cheek, to turn toward the touch, open the mouth, and search for the nipple
Newborns How can I find out what you know? How can I find out what a newborn baby knows?
Newborns Habituation Our responsiveness decreases with repeated stimulation As infants gain familiarity with repeated exposure to a visual stimulus, their interest wanes and they look away sooner Dishabituation To recognize a new stimulus as different, an infant must remember the initial stimulus If we had just been habituated (bored), and our attention is renewed, then we have been dishabituated
Developmental Stages Prenatal Development and Newborn Infancy and Childhood Adolescence Adulthood Biological and Cultural Notions of Gender Shaping Experience
Infancy and Childhood Brain development On the day you were born, you had most of the brain cells you will ever have BUT…the brain is still immature at birth Maturation : biological growth processes that enable orderly changes in behaviour, relatively uninfluenced by experience
Infancy and Childhood Motor Development As muscles and nervous system mature, more complicated skills emerge Babies roll over Sit unsupported Creep on all fours Walk Sequence is the same, but the timing may be different Genes have a major effect Experience has a limited effect
Infancy and Childhood Memory Average age of earliest conscious memory is 3.5 years As we gain a sense of self, our long-term memory increases
Infancy and Childhood Cognitive Development Cognition : refers to all the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating Jean Piaget
Cognitive Development: Piaget Schema – a concept or framework that organizes and interprets information ex) cats, dogs, concept of love Assimilation : we interpret a new experience in terms of our existing schemas Accommodation : we adapt our current understandings (schemas) to incorporate new information
Schema DogsCat
Assimilation Peacock Mantis ShrimpYeti Crab
Accommodation
Piaget’s Theory Sensorimotor Stage Preoperational Stage Concrete Operational Stage Formal Operational Stage
Sensorimotor Stage Birth to 2 years of age Experience the world through senses and actions Stranger Anxiety Evaluates people as unfamiliar and possibly threatening Helps protect babies 8 months and older
Sensorimotor Stage Infants have object permanence Infants under 6 months old lack object awareness The awareness that things continue to exist even when they are not perceived
Preoperational Stage Age 2 – 6 or 7 years Represents things with words and images; use intuition rather than logic Pretend play Egocentrism – difficulty perceiving things from another’s point of view
Preoperational Stage Lack the concept of conservation – properties such as mass, volume, and number remain the same despite changes in the forms of objects Language development Theory of Mind
Theory of Mind People’s ideas about their own and others’ mental states (feelings, perceptions, and thoughts) Empathy Infer feelings
Autism Spectrum Disorder Impaired theory of mind Difficulty inferring others’ thoughts and feelings Difficulty deducing facial expressions le_grandin_the_world_needs_all _kinds_of_minds.html le_grandin_the_world_needs_all _kinds_of_minds.html
Concrete Operational Stage Age 7 – 11 years Thinking logically about concrete events; grasping concrete analogies and performing arithmetical operations Mathematical transformation What is 8 + 4? Conservation
Formal Operational Stage Age 12 through adulthood Abstract reasoning Abstract logic Potential for mature moral reasoning