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Introductory Psychology

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Title: Introductory Psychology


1
Introductory Psychology
  • Growth of the Mind and Person

2
Questions
  • At which age do children begin to hear sound?
  • At which age can we teach children to swim?
  • After which age do children become less likely to
    develop a close bond with the adoptive parents?
  • At which do children begin to understand 112 or
    2-11?

3
Could you tell me how to grow, or is it
unconveyed, like melody or witchcraft? --- Emily
Dickinson (1862)
4
Part I. Developmental Psychology
5
Developmental Psychology
  • A scientific study of the development of behavior
    and mind from conception to death
  • Prenatal development
  • Infancy (0 - 2 years)
  • Childhood (2 - 12 years)
  • Adolescence (12 - 20 years)
  • Adulthood (20 -65 years)
  • Aged aging (65 year )

6
Major Areas of Developmental Psychology
  • Physical development
  • bodily structures
  • motor development
  • Cognitive development
  • Sensation, perception, memory, thinking
    (reasoning), language
  • Chapter 11
  • Social development
  • Emotion, social knowledge, morality, personality
  • Chapter 12

7
Methodology of Developmental Psychology
  • Observation
  • Naturalistic observation
  • Controlled observation (experiments)

8
Example of Naturalistic Observation
  • Craig Pepler (1992)
  • Bullying victimization in the playground
  • Bullying occurred every 7.5 min.
  • Average length 38 sec.
  • Adults intervened in 3 of the time
  • 36 involved objects, 24 racially motivated

9
Example of Experimental Study
  • Bandura (1965)
  • Observational learning
  • Whether children would imitate aggressive
    behaviors
  • Conditions
  • no consequence
  • model rewarded
  • model punished

10
Patterns of Development
11
Patterns of Development
12
Pattern of Development
13
Developmental functions Reversed U-shaped pattern
14
Developmental functions Stage-like pattern
15
Implications of Developmental Psychology
  • Theoretical
  • Adult mind behavior
  • Human evolution
  • Philosophy
  • Curiosity
  • Practical
  • Clinical
  • Educational
  • Parenting
  • Legal

16
Part 2. Physical Development
17
Genetic Inheritance
18
Genetic Inheritance
19
Dominant Recessive Genes
20
Conception
21
Prenatal Development
  • Conception
  • Zygote stage (lt2 weeks)
  • Embryo stage (2 - 8 weeks)
  • Fetal stage (2 - 9 months)

22
Onset of Key Body Parts
  • Central nervous system 2 weeks
  • Heart 4 weeks
  • Eye, arm, leg 4 weeks
  • Teeth, ear 6 weeks
  • External genitalia 8 weeks

23
Teratogens
  • Cocaine and Heroin
  • Miscarriage, premature birth, birth defects
  • Alcohol
  • Fetal alcohol syndrome, motor development problems

24
Teratogens
  • Smoking
  • Reduces oxygen flow, increases CO2, increases
    odds of premature birth, low birth weight, and
    miscarriage
  • Medicine
  • Thalidomide

25
Maternal Age Downs Syndrome
26
Body Growth
  • Physical growth
  • Weight
  • Height
  • Growth
  • spurt

27
Brain growth
  • Brain weight
  • 25 of an adults at birth, 60-70 at 1 year, 90
    at 5 years, 100 at 6 years
  • Neurons
  • 50 die during prenatal period
  • Connections
  • 50 more connections than an adults

28
Motor Development Reflexes
  • Rooting (birth to around 1 year)
  • Sucking (present at birth)
  • Swallowing (present at birth)
  • Crying (present at birth)
  • Breathing (starts at full-term birth)

29
Motor Development Reflexes
  • Grasping reflex disappears around 3-4 months
  • Tonic neck reflex 28 weeks gestation age
    disappears around 3-4 months

30
Motor Development Reflexes
  • Stepping reflex 6 weeks optimal disappears
    around 3 months
  • Swimming reflex (birth onset) disappears around
    4-6 months if not used

31
Motor Milestones
32
Motor Milestones
33
Principles of Motor Development
  • Proximal-distal direction
  • the tendency of body movement development in a
    trunk to extremities direction (near to far)
  • Cephalocaudal direction
  • tendency of body movement development in a head
    to foot direction (head to tail)

34
Part 3. Cognitive Development
35
Sensation
  • Hearing
  • 28 weeks gestation age (100-110 db Dr.
    Kisilevsky)
  • localizes sound at birth, disappears at 2 months,
    reappears at 4 months (Dr. Muir)
  • Taste
  • Smell

36
Sensation
  • Vision
  • visual acuity
  • 20/300 at birth, 20/150 at 1 month, 20/70 at 4
    months, 20/35 at 8 months, 20/20 at school ages

37
Sensation
  • Vision
  • Imprinting (Lorenz)
  • Critical period
  • period during which the organism is most
    sensitive to certain external stimuli
  • Visual input is critical as early as the infant
    is born

38
Long-term consequence of early visual deprivation
(Le Grand et al., 2001)
  • Congenital cataracts
  • configural processing deficit

39
Sensation
  • Vision
  • color vision
  • yellow, red, green at birth
  • blue, gray at 1 month
  • categorical perception at 4 months
  • peripheral vision

40
Infant Research Methods
  • Habituation method
  • Habituating stimulus until infant loses interest
  • Dishabituating stimulus to see whether infant
    regains interest

41
Infant Research Methods
  • Preferential looking method
  • Presenting a pair of stimuli to see whether
    infant looks longer at one of them

42
Perception
43
Perception
  • Depth perception
  • crawling study
  • heart rate study

44
Perception
  • Depth perception

45
Perception
  • Size constancy
  • Shape constancy

46
Perception
  • Inter-sensory integration
  • Meltzoff Borton (1979)
  • 1-month-olds
  • sucking on one of the pacifiers and then seeing
    the pair
  • 72 looked longer at the previously sucked
    pacifier

47
Perception
  • Sensory-motor integration
  • Imitation (Meltzoff Moore, 1977)

48
Memory
  • Short-term memory
  • Capacity

49
Memory
  • Short-term memory
  • Processing speed

50
Memory
  • Long-term memory
  • Reinforced kicking paradigm
  • mobile with or without string
  • 2-, 3-, 6-month-olds

51
Memory
  • Memory Strategies
  • rehearsal
  • Metamemory
  • memory monitoring

52
Thinking Reasoning
  • Piagets theory
  • Schema the mode in which thinking is carried out
  • behavioral schema
  • symbolic schema
  • operational schema
  • Assimilation
  • children change new experience to fit the
    existing schema
  • Accommodation
  • children change the existing schema to fit new
    experience

53
Piagets Stages of Cognitive Development
54
Object Permanence
  • Object permanence
  • the notion that an object continues to exist even
    out of sight (out of sight is not out of mind)

55
Egocentrism
  • Three mountain task
  • Piagets results
  • 4-6-year-olds choose their own view
  • 6-9-year-olds randomly choose other views
  • 9-10-year-olds choose a correct view

56
Conservation
  • Liquid conservation task
  • pre-operational child fails the task
  • concrete operation child succeeds in the task

57
Formal operational thinking
  • Balance Beam Task
  • Concrete operational children fail the task
  • Formal operational children succeed in the task
    because they are able to consider more than two
    factors simultaneously and use hypothesis testing

58
Counter evidence
  • Object permanence
  • impossible event studies

59
Count evidence
  • Object permanence
  • Infant addition and subtraction

60
Count evidence
  • Egocentrism
  • theory of mind studies
  • Displacement Task

61
Count Evidence
  • Egocentrism
  • Representational Change Task (theory of mind
    task)
  • Gopnik Astington (1988)

62
Counter evidence
  • Balance beam task
  • Siegler
  • Rule 1 weight only
  • Rule 2 weight distance when weights are the
    same on both sides
  • Rule 3 weight versus distance
  • Rule 4 weight X distance

63
Counter evidence
  • Balance beam task
  • Rules 1-2 lt9 years, Rules 2-3 9-17 years, Rule
    4 gt17 years
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