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Published byMaura Comber Modified over 9 years ago
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Development Area vs. Approach Child Psychology Infancy Adolescence Adulthood Old Age Prenatal
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Development Life-Span Human Development From Conception to Death
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Zygote to Infant
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Prenatal Development Stage 1 = Zygote ( the fertilized egg) 2 week period of rapid cell division (undifferentiated) Ends with implantation to uterine wall Over half do not successfully implant
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Prenatal Development Stage 2 = Embryo human organism from 2 weeks through 8 weeks –Begins with implantation to the uterine wall –Placenta and major organs form, heart beats, liver makes red blood cells
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Prenatal Development Stage 3 = Fetus human organism from 8 weeks after conception to birth rapid growth of brain and body in final 3 months
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Prenatal Development Nature AND nurture matter in utero Critical periods (nurture) – particular stages of development when certain environmental influences have the most impact Teratogen - any factor (e.g., chemicals, viruses) that can reach the embryo or fetus and cause a birth defect Nicotine – low birth weight, learning disabilities Marijuana – irritability, nervousness, tremors Cocaine – respiratory problems, learning disabilities, seizures
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Prenatal Development Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) physical and cognitive abnormalities in children caused by a pregnant woman’s heavy drinking (five drinks per day) symptoms include facial misproportions, mental retardation, behavior problems
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Critical Period: Thalidomide Poor Nutrition (e.g., protein deficiency)
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Nature vs. Nurture Nature Genetics Nurture Experience Environment Learning Heritability
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Conception and Twins Monozygotic twins – (identical twins) –one zygote splits into two separate but identical masses of cells –each develops into a separate embryo. Dizygotic twins – (fraternal twins) –two eggs are separately fertilized by different sperm –each develops into a separate zygote, then a separate embryo.
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Nature vs. Nurture Nature Genetics Nurture Experience Environment Learning Heritability Twin Studies Monozygotic (identical) vs. Dizygotic (fraternal)
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Cognitive Development Piaget (Cognitive) 1.Sensorimotor 2.Preoperational primitive concepts 3. Concrete Operational rules 4. Formal Operational abstract Movement & Manipulation Object Permanence Single words, egocentrism Movement & Manipulation Conservation Hypothetical reasoning
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Cognitive Development Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development Schema Cognitive structure Accommodation Creating or extending a schema Assimilation Using an existing schema
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Cognitive & Moral Development Piaget (Cognitive) 1.Sensorimotor 2.Preoperational primitive concepts 3. Concrete Operational rules 4. Formal Operational abstract hypothetical reasoning Kohlberg (Moral) 1.(none) 2.Preconventional reward/punishment 3. Conventional rules 4. Post-Conventional Moral Dilemmas
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Studying Development Cross-Sectional Age Cohort Longitudinal Time Series
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Adult Development 1.Independence 2.Marriage 3.Parenthood 4.Career 5.Mid-Life Crisis 6. Post-Parental 7. Separation Distress 8. Old Age 9. Death Stage -- Crisis
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Marital Satisfaction over the Life Span
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