Grant Clay
Period 3
11/2/08
AP Psychology Outline
Chapter 11: Human Development across Lifespan
Red – Definition
Blue - Important Points
Green - Important People & Contributions
- Development – Sequence of Age-Related Changes that occur as a Person Progresses from Conception until Death.
- Prenatal Development
- Zygote – 1 Celled Organism formed by Union of Sperm and an Egg.
- Prenatal Period – Period from Conception to Birth, usually 9 Months of Pregnancy.
- Prenatal Development
- Germinal Stage – First Phase of Prenatal Development, encompassing the first 2 Weeks after Conception.
i. Placenta – Structure that allows Oxygen & Nutrients to pass into Fetus from the Mother’s Bloodstream and Bodily Waste to Pass Out the Mother.
- Embryonic Stage – Second Stage of Prenatal Development, lasting from 2 weeks to End of Second Month.
i. Most Vital Organs are Formed.
- Fetal Stage – Third Stage of Prenatal Development, lasting from 2 Months until Birth.
i. Muscles Form, and Bones harden.
ii. Age of Viability – Age at which a Baby can survive Pre-Mature Birth, about 22 – 26 Weeks.
- Environmental Factors & Prenatal Development
- Maternal Malnutrition – Malnutrition of Mother causes Baby to be more likely to have health problems for rest of life.
- Maternal Drug Use – Drugs used by Mother pass through Placenta to Baby and cause many Birth Defects and Health Problems.
i. Fetal Alcohol Syndrome – Collection of Inborn Problems associated with excessive Alcohol use during Pregnancy.
- Maternal Illness – Many Illnesses contracted by Mother can be transmitted to Newborn.
i. Aids/HIV can pass from Mother to Newborn in Birth.
- Parental Health Care – Less Parental Health Care for low-income group causes Many problems for Babies.
- Childhood
- Motor Development – Progression of Muscular Coordination required for Physical Activities.
- Cephalocaudal Trend – Head–to–Foot direction of Motor Development.
- Proximodistal Trend – Center–Outward Direction of Motor Development.
- Maturation – Development that Reflects the Gradual Unfolding of one’s Genetic Blueprint.
- Developmental Norms – The Median Age at which Individuals display Various Behaviors and Abilities.
- Different Cultures develop specific Motor Skills Faster.
- Differences on Temperament
i. Temperament – Characteristic Mood, Activity Level, and Emotional Reactivity.
ii. Longitudinal Design – Study One Group of Participants Repeatedly over a Period of Time.
iii. Cross-Sectional Design – Study Compare Groups of Participants of Differing Age at a Single Point in Time.
iv. Jerome Kagen – “Temperament at Childhood can change over a Lifetime.”
- Attachment
i. Attachment – Close Emotional Bonds of Affection that Develop Between Infants and their Caregivers.
ii. Separation Anxiety – Emotional Distress seen in Many Infants which happens when they are Separated from People who they have formed an Attachment with.
iii. Harry Harlow – “Attachment happens because the Mother becomes a Conditioned Reinforcer.”
iv. Attachment Patterns
1. Secure Attachment – Use Mother as Secure base to Venture out.
2. Resistant Attachment – Anxious when Mother is Present or Leaves.
3. Avoidant Attachment – Child Doesn’t care when Mother Leaves or is Present.
4. Attachment Development Norms are same across Culture, but Type of Attachment varies across Culture.
5. John Bowlby – “Attachment is an Evolutionary Adaptation.”
- Personality Development
i. Stage – Developmental Period During Which Characteristics Patterns of Behavior are Exhibited and Certain Capacities become Established.
ii. Erickson’s Stage Theory – Personality is shaped how one deals with 8 Psychosocial crises in the 8 Stages of Life.
- Cognitive Development
i. Cognitive Development – Transitions in Children Patterns of Thinking, including Reasoning, Remembering, and Problem Solving.
ii. Jean Paiget Theory of Cognitive Development – All Children goes through 4 Stages of Cognitive Development.
iii. Assimilation – Interpreting New Experiences in Terms of Existing Mental Structures without Changing Them.
iv. Accommodation – Changing Existing Mental Structures to Explain New Experiences.
1. Sensorimotor Period
a. Object Permanence – When a Child Recognizes Objects that Continue to Exist even when they are No Longer Available.
2. Preoperational Period
a. Conservation – Awareness that Physical Quantities Remain Constant in Spite of Changes in their Shape or Appearance.
b. Centration – Tendency to Focus on just One Feature of a Problem, Neglecting other Important Aspects.
c. Irreversability – Inability to Envision Reversing an Action.
d. Egocentrism – Thinking Characterized by a Limited Ability to Share Another’s Point of View.
e. Animism – The Belief that All things are Living.
3. Concrete Operational Period
4. Formal Operational Period
- Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory
i. Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) – Gap Between what a Learner can Accomplish alone and what a Learner can Achieve with Guidance from More Skilled Partners.
ii. Scaffolding – When the Assistance Provided to a Child is Adjusted as Learning Progresses.
- Innate Cognitive Abilities
i. Habituation – Gradual Reduction in the Strength of a Response when a Stimulus Event is Presented Repeatedly.
ii. Dishabituation – Occurs if a New Stimulus Elicits an Increase in the Strength of a Habituated Response.
- Moral Reasoning
i. Kohlberg Stage Theory – Children make Choices based on Reasoning in Stages and not Behavior.
- Adolescence
- Pubescence – 2 Year Span Preceding Puberty during which the Changes Leading to Physical and Sexual Maturity take Place.
- Secondary Sex Characteristics – Physical Features that Distinguish 1 Sex from the Other but that are not Essential for Reproduction.
- Puberty – Stage during which Sexual Functions reach Maturity, which Marks the Beginning of Adolescence.
- Primary Sex Characteristics – The Structures necessary for Sexual Reproduction.
- Menarche – 1st Occurrence of Menstruation.
- Spermache – 1st Occurrence of Ejaculation.
- Pre-Frontal Cortex (Control Center) is the Last to Mature in Adolescence.
- Search for Identity
i. Erik Erikson & James Marcia
ii. Identity Diffusion – Refusing to Chart a Life Course.
iii. Identity Foreclosure – Premature Commitment to Visions.
iv. Identity Moratorium – Delaying Commitment to play with different Ideas.
v. Identity Achievement – Arriving at a Sense of Self-Direction.
- Adulthood
- Personality Development
i. Personality in Adulthood Experiences both Stability and Change.
- Midlife Crisis – A Difficult, Turbulent, Period of Doubts and Reappraisal of one’s Life.
- Erikson’s View of Adulthood
i. Intimacy v. Isolation
ii. Generativity v. Self-Absorption
iii. Integrity v. Despair
- Family Life
- Family Life Cycle – Sequence of Stages that Families tend to Progress through.
- Adjusting to different Stages: Marriage, Parenthood, and Empty Nest.
- Aging & Physical Changes
- People Lose Vision as Become Older.
- Eyesight goes from Near-Sightedness to Far-Sightedness.
- Menopause in Women.
- Dementia – Abnormal Condition marked by Multiple Cognitive Deficits that Include Memory Impairment.
i. Can Be caused by a Variety of Diseases, Including Alzheimer’s.
- Aging & Cognitive Changes
- Aging takes toll on Speed of Memory First.
- But Ability Remains throughout age.
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