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HDP 1 Midterm Review Fall 2005
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Topics covered WEEK 0 Th 9/22Introduction to course (Jeff Elman, Dept. of Cognitive Science)Jeff Elman WEEK 1 Tu, 9/27Infancy and Evolution (Jim Moore, Dept. of Anthropology)Jim Moore Th 9/29The History of Childhood (Stefan Tanaka, Dept. of History)Stefan Tanaka WEEK 2 Tu 10/4Genes, Brain Development and Behavior (Leslie Carver, Dept. of Psychology)Leslie Carver Th 10/6Brain Development: The Basics (Joan Stiles, Dept. of Cognitive Science)Joan Stiles
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WEEK 3 Tu 10/11CLASS CANCELLED Th 10/13Development of Visual Perception (Karen Dobkins, Dept. of Psychology)Karen Dobkins WEEK 4 Tu 10/18Conceptual Development (Gedeon Deak, Dept. of Cognitive Science)Gedeon Deak Th 10/20Social Development (Gail Heyman, Dept. of Psychology)Gail Heyman WEEK 5 Tu 10/25Autism (Aubyn Stahmer, Children’s Hospital)
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Introduction (Elman)
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Important terms and concepts Maturation Learning Adaptation Evolution Emergentism Genetic conservatism The “Gene for X” fallacy Nature vs. (or and?) Nurture
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The “Gene for X” fallacy
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More DNALess DNA
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Genetic conservatism
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The power of the environment
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from butterfly hostfrom alderfly host Trichogramma (wasp)
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from butterfly hostfrom alderfly host Trichogramma (wasp)
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Emergentism The whole is greater than the sum of its parts Interactions create complexity Outcomes are not easily predictable Multiple sources of causation A prime example: Language
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Infancy & evolution (Moore)
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Important terms and concepts Life History Theory 5 stages of development The “obstetric dilemma” Bipedalism precocial species vs. altricial species
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very rapid growth, but rate falling fast slower, even growth sudden rapid growth again, then rapid fall in rate growth stops growth rate drops
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INFANT (ends at weaning – 36 mos) CHILD (ends at end of brain growth – 7 yrs) JUVENILE (ends at end of dependence/puberty – 10-12 yrs) ADOLESCENT (ends when socially & physically adult-like – 19-25 yrs) ADULT
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LIFE HISTORY THEORY “…natural selection favors organismic life cycles in which resources are allocated among growth, maintenance and reproduction in relation to age or size in a manner that maximizes the reproductive potential across individual life spans.” Pereira 1993
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A big question Why do humans extend the immature period?
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Breaking it down… What is the reproductive disadvantage of extended immaturity? What might compensate for this disadvantage? What does the “obstetric dilemma” refer to?
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The obstetric dilemma 1.Bipedalism associated with change in pelvic structure & smaller birth canal 2.Evolution of humans associated with increased brain size 3.Energy cost for mother to continue supporting fetal brain development
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A possible solution Be born “early”, and have an extended transition from infancy to adulthood Also: create “childhood” a. Reduced nutritional needs b. Help with caring for younger siblings c. Gets young brains into enriched environment
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The history of childhood (Tanaka)
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Important terms and concepts Functional imperfection Ages of man John Locke (ideas about childhood) Emile Rousseau (ideas about childhood) Industrial Revolution (impact on childhood) Tutelary complex History of public education
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History of childhood Culturally, childhood is modern and somewhat peculiar to the U.S. Early views on childhood: “little adults” Later: –J. Locke: “tabula rasa” –E. Rousseau: to be protected and nurtured
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Industrial Revolution’s effects on child labor –Factories were dangerous environments –Produced asymmetric growth & deformities –Separated children from families
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Tutelary complex as response to –Industrial Revolution –Immigration and Migration Public education –When? Mid-1800s –Why? Socialize the poor & working class
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Genes, brain development, & behavior (Carver)
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Important terms and concepts Behavior Genetics (what is it? how does it work?) Variation Hereditability (as defined by Behavior Genetics) Methods (twin studies; adoption studies) Shortcomings and problems with B.G. Reproductive cycle (meiosis, mitosis) “Cross-over” events (Do not need to know 6 phases of meiosis) Embryogensis (what happens when, and where) Early neural events: (see also Stiles lecture) –proliferation –Migration –differentiation
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Behavior Genetics Goal: –Measure how different people are, as a function of how closely they’re related Definition of heritability –what is odd about this definition? Shortcomings –Of twin studies –Of adoption studies
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Basics of genetics 22 pairs of chromosomes, plus 1 pair of sex chromomes (X-X, X-Y) Meiosis (reproduction): –1 cell produces 1 cell –Introduces variation Mitosis (basic cell division): –1 cell produces 2 cells
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Brain development – the basics (Stiles)
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Important terms and concepts Basic questions: –How does such a complex organ as the brain get built? –How plastic/adaptable is the brain, in response either to damage or to abnormal experience? Important terms: –ectoderm, endoderm, mesoderm –neural tube –proliferative zones –glial cells, neurons, radial glial cells –cell birthday –Radial Unit Hypothesis; protomap vs. protocortex hypotheses –active transport vs. passive transport; “inside-out” organization of the cortex –cortex (i.e., “cortical mantle”) –laminar organization of cortex –white matter; gray matter –“productive events”; “subtractive events”; synaptogenesis
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The human brain Frontal Lobe Parietal Lobe Occipital Lobe Temporal Lobe
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Corpus callosum
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CORTEX (neurons; “gray matter”) “white matter” (axons)
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Brain facts 1.Brain weight (adult and newborn) 3 lbs (adult); 0.8 lbs (newborn) 2.Number of neurons in cortex: 20 billion 3.Number of synapses: 60 trillion 4.Rate of early neuron growth & when greatest? 1 st half of pregnancy 200,000/minute
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7 important stages 1.Development of neural plateE12 2.Formation of trilaminar disk beginsE15 3.Formation of neural tube beginsE18 4.Neural tube closes (top; then bottom)E25; E27 5.Ventricular zone progenitor cells start dividing (symmetrically)E28 6.VZ asymmetric cell growth (neurogenesis) startsE42 7.Greatest production of neuronsE42-E125
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Anencephaly Spina bifida
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What parts of the neural tube become what parts of the brain? Ventricules: (fluid-filled) holes in the middle of the brain Ventricular zone: inner surface of hollow tube where progenitor cells lie
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Then… Migration –Cell’s birthday –Role of radial glial cells –“inside/out” pattern of migration –6 cortical layers Cell differentiation Subtractive events
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Importance of experience & cell activity (eyes) (ears) (auditory cortex) (visual cortex)
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Importance of experience & cell activity (“re-wiring the ferret” experiment) (eyes) (ears) (auditory cortex) (visual cortex) Now acts like visual cortex!
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Development of visual perception (Dobkins)
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Important terms and concepts Basic questions: –What are the perceptual consequences of neural changes? –How is infant vision different from adult vision? –What are the clinical implications? Important terms: –sensitivity –threshold/contrast threshold –contrast –spatial frequency –grating stimulus –psychophysics –Snellen exam –acuity
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Important terms and concepts Important terms (cont’d.): –focus –luminance –chromatic –depth perception –stereopsis –binocular vision –monocular vision –photoreceptors (differences between infant and adult, shape and spacing)
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Methods Q: how do you test adults’ vision? Q: how do you test infants’ vision? Q: what level of performance is considered the threshold? Q: what is the difference between threshold and sensitivity?
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Sensitivity - measures sensitivity to contrast Acuity - measures to fine detail - spatial frequency
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The “rule of thumb”: 1 degree ~= what your thumb covers at arm’s length
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Lower threshold is better Higher sensitivity is better
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Changes in infant photoreceptors Hendrickson & Yuodelis, 1984 Adult Newborn 22 weeks gestation What determines sensitivity? morphology What determines acuity? spacing
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Changes in infant vision… Acuity and Sensitivity –adult like by 3-5 years Color –compared with adults?
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Infants possess equally low sensitivity for BOTH Luminance (Black/White) and Chromatic (Red/Green) stimuli INFANT COLOR VISION IS RELATIVELY FINE!! Low SF Contrast sensitivity Age (in months) Adults Luminance Chromatic
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Changes in infant vision… Acuity and Sensitivity –adult like by 3-5 years Color –compared with adults? Optimal visual stimuli for an infant?
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Conceptual development (Deak)
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Important terms and concepts Important terms: –“what” and “where” pathways Which is ventral stream? Which is dorsal stream? –Object permanence –Means-end grasping –A-not-B error –False belief error –Attention-sharing (gaze- and point-following)
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Timelines Object permanence –At 4 mos: only motion matters –By 6-7 mos: shape, color, texture, etc. matter Means-end grasping –By 5 mos, can grasp –By 6-7 mos, show means-end grasping –By 8 mos, show “choosy [smart] reaching” A-not-B error –8-9 mos will perseverate
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A B C How do you interpret “surprise”(longer looking time)? Which of the 2 nd two displays would cause surprise at what ages? Why?
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Timelines (cont’d.) Object awareness –6 mos: learn features that “go together” –10 mos: correlate object features w/location Use of gaze- and point-following –6 mos: follow if objects are in view (front of infant) –9 mos: follow if objects are in peripheral view –12 mos: follow if objects are out of sight (back of infant)
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Social development (Heyman)
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Methodological challenges Correlation vs. causation Multiple sources of causation Constraints on naturalistic (vs. experimental) data
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Milestones Newborns:imitation; preferences for mother’s voice 12 mos:stranger & separation anxiety 1 st attempts at comforting & hurting social referencing 18 mos:aware that others’ desires may differ 2 yrs:“terrible 2s”: independence private speech transition from parallel play to joint play
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Milestones 3 yrs:same-sex preference ability to hide emotions 4 years:able to pass “false belief” test 5 years:gender constancy understand difference between real and apparent emotion 6yrs:understand more complex emotions (pride, shame, etc.)
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Autism (Stahmer)
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Important terms and concepts Definition of Autism Spectrum Disorder Echolalia Playlalia Incidence of autism Gender differences Etiology (=likely cause) Discrete Trial Training Pivotal Response Training (& profile of best responders)
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Diagnosing Autism Spectrum Disorder What 3 things are needed? –Deficits in social behavior & attachments –Deficits in verbal & nonverbal communication –Perseverative, stereotyped, repetitive behaviors
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Behavioral treatments Discrete Trial Treatment –Presenting instructions and questions: Child attending Easily discriminable instructions Short and consistent instructions –Child responds or fails to respond –Consequences Clear, consistent consequence (positive)
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Limitations of DTT? Failure to generalize to novel situations Lack of spontaneity Robotic-like behavior Require familiar prompts to engage behavior Slow and time-consuming Not easy or pleasant for child or trainer
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Pivotal Response Training Emphasizes –Child choice (behaviors child wants to do) –Direct reinforcement –Intersperse maintenance (easy) tasks –Frequent task variation –Turn taking: let child initiate –Tasks involve multiple simultaneous cues
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Assessment Which child characteristics best predict success on Pivotal Reponse Training? –High toy use –Low avoidance behaviors
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Exam information Be on time: the exam will take 70-75 minutes Bring only pens/pencils Eyes and papers on desk! Know and write on each page: –Your name –Your PID (e.g., A01234567) –Your Section ID (A02, A08, A11, etc.) –Your TA’s name and the day and time of your section
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Coverage: –Lecture = 70%; readings = 30% Format: –73 questions (most worth 3 pts) 42 multiple choice –Beware of “Which of the following is NOT…” questions –Only 1 answer will be correct for M.C. questions 9 True/False 22 fill-in-the-blank, matching, short answer Grading
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1)The evolutionary tension between infant brain size and female pelvic shape in humans is typically referred to as the: [3 pts] a)obstetric dilemma b)gynecological situation c)neural expansion hypothesis d)big brain problem 2)Explain, in 3-4 sentences, what is meant by the “gene for X” fallacy? [3 pts]
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3)True or False: White matter refers to the outer layer of cells on the brain, also known as the cortex. [3 pts] a)T b)F 4)Which of the following is NOT true of young children? [ 3pts] 1)Most children pass the “false belief” test by 4 years of age. 2)Most children become aware of gender constancy by 3 years. 3)Few children below the age of 4 years understand the concept of gender constancy. 4)Children become aware of more complex emotions around 6 years.
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Good luck!
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