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Published byMaximilian Stafford Modified over 8 years ago
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Infancy Emotional Development
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Roles of emotions Help humans survive and adapt to their environment Fear, smile Guide and motivate human behavior Categorize events as dangerous or beneficial Support communication with others read facial. Gestural, postural, and vocal cues Social Referencing Inexperienced person relies on experienced person to interpret the behavior
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Emotional Development in Infants 6 basic emotions Happiness, sadness, anger, surprise, disgust, fear Some present at birth, Develop as grow Birth – distress, disgust, interest 6-10 weeks – social smile – joy 3-4 months – anger, surprise, sadness 5-7 months – fear 6-8 months – shame. Shyness, self-awareness 2 nd year – contempt, guilt Self-regulation Ability to control negative emotions and integrate emotions adaptively into daily social interacting Main task during first year Appears 2 nd ½ of 1 st year.
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Greenspan’s Model Stages in Children's Emotional Development AgeMilestone 0-3 monthsSelf-regulation and interest in world 2-7 months“Falling in love” 3-10 monthsDevelop intentional communication 9-18 monthsEmergence of an organized sense of self 18-36 monthsCreating emotional ideas 30-48 monthsEmotional thinking – the basis for fantasy, reality, and self-esteem
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Attachment affectionate bond that one individual forms for another and that endures across time and space 3 stages in developing infant attachment First 2 months – infants are aroused by all parts of their environment 3 rd month – infants display indiscriminate attachment 7 th month – babies show signs of specific attachment First object of attachment most commonly mother Stranger anxiety A wariness of unknown people 7-8 months, peaks at 13-15 months then decreases Separation anxiety Crying and exhibiting other signs of distress when a familiar caregiver leaves Starts about 8 months and lasts about 8 months
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Temperament Relatively consistent basic disposition that underlie and modulate much of a person’s behavior Alexander Thomas Study – 3 most common types of babies Difficult babies Wail and cry, tantrums, not easy (10%) Slow-to-warm-up babies Low activity, adapt slowly, withdrawn, negative mood (15%) Easy babies Sunny, cheerful mood, adapt quickly (40%) Remaining 35% mixtures of traits
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9 Components of Temperament Activity level – active vs. inactive Rhythmicity – regularity Distractibility – outside stimuli after behavior Approach/withdrawal – new people Adaptability Attention span and persistence Intensity of reaction Threshold of responsiveness – degree of stimuli needed Quality of mood
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