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AP Psychology: Developmental Psychology (Modules 13-16)

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This flashcard set introduces developmental psychology as the study of human growth across the lifespan—physically, cognitively, and socially. It outlines three central debates: nature vs. nurture, continuity vs. stages, and stability vs. change. The next card begins coverage of early biological development, starting with the zygote stage.

Developmental Psychology

The study of how people are continually developing – physically, cognitively and socially from infancy through old age

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Key Terms

Term
Definition

Developmental Psychology

The study of how people are continually developing – physically, cognitively and socially from infancy through old age

Three Major Issues in Developmental Psych

  1. Nature vs. Nurture: How do genetic inheritance (our nature) and experience (the nurture we receive) influence development?

  2. C...

Zygote

The fertilized egg; it enters a 2-week period of rapid cell division and develops into an embryo

Embryo

The developing human organism from about 2 weeks after fertilization through the second month

Fetus

The developing human organism from 9 weeks after conception to birth

Newborns prefer their mother’s voice to their father’s immediately after birth. Why?

The fetus is responsive to sound and is exposed to the sound of its mother’s muffled voice constantly while in the womb.

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TermDefinition

Developmental Psychology

The study of how people are continually developing – physically, cognitively and socially from infancy through old age

Three Major Issues in Developmental Psych

  1. Nature vs. Nurture: How do genetic inheritance (our nature) and experience (the nurture we receive) influence development?

  2. Continuity vs. Stages: Is development a gradual, continuous process or a sequence of separate stages?

  3. Stability vs. Change: Do our early personality traits persist through life, or do we become different persons as we age?

Zygote

The fertilized egg; it enters a 2-week period of rapid cell division and develops into an embryo

Embryo

The developing human organism from about 2 weeks after fertilization through the second month

Fetus

The developing human organism from 9 weeks after conception to birth

Newborns prefer their mother’s voice to their father’s immediately after birth. Why?

The fetus is responsive to sound and is exposed to the sound of its mother’s muffled voice constantly while in the womb.

Teratogens

Agents, such as chemicals and viruses, that can reach the embryo or fetus during prenatal development and cause harm


Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

Physical and cognitive abnormalities in children caused by heavy drinking while pregnant

Rooting reflex

When something touches an infant’s cheek, babies turn toward it and open their mouths

Habituation

Decreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation. More familiarity = waning interest

Maturation

Biological growth processes that enable orderly changes in behavior, relatively uninfluenced by experience (ex. standing before walking, using nouns before adjectives)

By when do you have most of your brain cells?

Birth


Where is brain growth most rapid from ages 3-6?

Frontal lobes, which enable rational planning

What are the last areas of the brain to develop?

Association areas, responsible for thinking, memory and language

When is the average age of people’s earliest memories?

3.5 years

Who is the most famous developmental psychologist?

Jean Piaget

Cognition

All mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering and communicating

According to Piaget, what is the driving force behind our intellectual progression?

An unceasing struggle to make sense of our experiences

Schemas

Concepts/frameworks that organize and interpret information

Assimilate

Interpreting our new experience in terms of our existing schemas (ex. A moose must be a cow, because cows have four legs.)

Accommodate

Adapting our current understandings (schemas) to incorporate new information (ex. Schema is modified to include “moose.”)

Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development

  1. Sensorimotor Stage

  2. Pre-operational Stage

  3. Concrete Operational Stage

  4. Formal Operational Stage

Sensorimotor Stage

Stage during which infants know the world mostly in terms of their sensory impressions and motor activities

Age Range: Birth - 2 years

Important concepts: Object Permanence

Pre-operational Stage

Stage during which a child learns to use language but does not yet comprehend the mental operations of concrete logic

Age Range: 2 years - 6 or 7 years

Important concepts: Conservation, Symbolic Thinking, Egocentrism, Theory of Mind

Conservation

Those in the pre-operational stage don't understand conservation, the principle that quantity remains the same despite changes in shape. (Ex. The girl believes the tall, narrow glass has more milk than the shorter glass, but the volume of milk is actually the same.)

Symbolic Thinking

The ability to recognize that representations can act as symbols (Ex. using a model room with a hidden model toy to find a real toy in a real room)

Egocentrism

The pre-operational child's difficulty to take another's point of view; lack of sympathy (Ex. "How would YOU feel is she took your toy?")

Theory of Mind

People's ideas about their own and others' mental states -- about their feelings, perceptions and thoughts, and the behaviors one might predict

Concrete Operational Stage

Stage during which children gain mental operations that enable them to think logically about concrete events

Age Range: 6 to 7 years - 11 years

Formal Operational Stage

Stage during which people begin to think logically about abstract concepts

Age Range: 12 years - Adulthood

According to Vygotsky, why do children increasingly think in works and use words to solve problems by age 7?

Language provides the building blocks for thinking.

What is the difference between Piaget's and Vygtosky's emphasis on children's cognitive development?

Piaget emphasized that a child's mind grows through interaction with the physical environment while Vygotsky emphasized that a child's mind grows through interaction with the social environment.

Stranger Anxiety

Fear of strangers that infants commonly display; marks a new ability to evaluate people as unfamiliar and possibly threatening

Summarize Harry Harlow's study of attachment on monkeys.

Monkeys were raised with two artificial "mothers," one a bare wire cylinder with a bottle, the other wrapped in cloth with no bottle. Despite a lack of food source, the clothed "mother" was preferred over the wired one. This disproved the idea that infants developed attachment to those who satisfied their need for nourishment.

Besides body contact, what else is important in forming an attachment?

One person providing a safe haven when distressed and secure base from which to explore

Critical period

An optimal period shortly after birth when an organism's exposure to certain stimuli or experiences produces proper development

Lorenz's imprinting

The process by which certain animals form attachments during a critical period very early in life

Do human children imprint?

No, but exposure contributes to familiarity and familiarity breeds content.


Describe Mary Ainsworth's types of attachment.

Secure attachment: When placed in a strange situation, infants are likely to play comfortably and explore surroundings. Distress comes when she leaves; they cling to her upon return.

Insecure attachment: When in a strange situation and in their mother's presence, they are less likely to explore and may cling to their mother. They are upset or indifferent when she leaves and returns.

Temperament

A person's characteristic emotional reactivity and intensity

Erikson's Basic Trust

A sense that the world is predictable and reliable; said to be formed during infancy by appropriate experiences with responsive caregivers

Explain two different effects on a child if they are deprived of attachment.

Children become withdrawn, frightened or even speechless. As they grow, they can likely become neglectful or aggressive.

Self-concept

Our understanding and evaluation of who we are

What is the difference between self-concept and self-esteem?

Self-concept is the understanding of who you are as a person, while self-esteem is a measure of self-worth

Parenting Styles

  1. Authoritarian

  2. Permissive

  3. Authoritative

Authoritarian Parenting Style

Parents impose rules and expect obedience. Ex. "Why" Because I said so."

Permissive Parenting Style

Parents submit to their children's desires, making few demands and little punishment

Authoritative Parenting Style

Parents are both demanding and responsive, setting and enforcing rules while explaining them and encouraging open discussion about them.

According to Baumrind, what kinds of parents do kids who have high self-esteem tend to have?

Warm, concerned authoritative parents

Adolescence

Transition period from childhood to adulthood, extending from puberty to independence

Puberty

Period of sexual maturation during which a person becomes capable of reproducing

Primary sex characteristics

Body structures (ovaries, testes, external genetalia) that make sexual reproduction possible

Secondary sex characteristics

Non-reproductive sexual characteristics, such as female breasts and hips, male voice quality and body hair

What are the psychological effects on girls who mature early?

It's stressful; girls may experience teasing and sexual harassment as a result of their early maturation. Or, they may associate with other adolescents.

What happens to your neurons in your brain during adolescence?

Selective pruning occurs; unused neurons and connections are eliminated.

What lobe of the brain matures during adolescence?

Frontal

During early teens, what is reasoning like?

Self-focused, believes their private experiences are unique spectacles that cannot be understood by parents

Kohlberg's Stages of Moral Development

  1. Preconventional Morality

  2. Conventional Morality

  3. Postconventional Morality

Preconventional Morality

Before age 9, most children's morality focuses on self-interest, obeying rules to avoid punishment or gain concrete rewards.

Ex. "I won't eat a cookie before my meal so I can play with my toy."

Conventional Morality

Caring for others and upholding laws and social rules simply because they are laws and rules.

Ex. Not running a red light because it's the law

Postconventional Morality

Actions are judged "right" because they flow from people's rights or basic ethical principles

Ex. Civil Rights Movement sit-ins; civil disobedience

What happens to children who learn to delay gratification?

They become more socially responsible, academically successful and productive.

According to Erikson, what is the main crisis during adolescence?

Identity vs. Role Confusion; solidify a sense of self or identity

Identity


Our sense of self; according to Erikson, the adolescent's task is to solidify a sense of self by testing and integrating various roles

Social Identity

The aspect of the communal "we" in self-concept; the part of our answer to "Who am I?" that comes from our group memberships

Erikson's Psychosocial Stages of Development

  1. Trust vs. Mistrust

  2. Autonomy vs. Shame/Doubt

  3. Initiative vs. Guilt

  4. Industry vs. Inferiority

  5. Identity vs. Role Confusion

  6. Intimacy vs. Isolation

  7. Generativity vs. Self-Absorption

  8. Integrity vs. Despair

Trust vs. Mistrust

If needs are dependably met, infants develop a sense of basic trust.

Age: Infancy (1 year)

Autonomy vs. Shame/Doubt

Toddlers learn to exercise their will and do things for themselves, or they doubt their abilities.

Age: Toddlerhood (1-3 years)

Initiative vs. Guilt

Preschoolers learn to initiate tasks and carry out plans, or they feel guilty about their efforts to be independent.

Age: Preschool (3-6 years)

Industry vs. Inferiority


Children learn the pleasure of applying themselves to tasks, or they feel inferior.

Age: Elementary school (6 years to puberty)


Identity vs. Role Confusion

Teens work at refining a sense of self by testing roles then integrating them into an identity, or they experience confusion about themselves.

Age: Adolescence (teens to 20s)

Intimacy vs. Isolation

Young adults struggle to form close relationships and to gain the capacity for intimate love, or they feel isolated.

Age: Young adulthood (20s to early 40s)

Generativity vs. Self-Absorption

In middle age, people discover a sense of contributing to the world, usually through family and work, or they may feel a lack of purpose.

Age: Middle adulthood (40s to 60s)

Integrity vs. Despair

Reflecting on his or her life, an older adult may feel a sense of satisfaction or failure.

Age: Late adulthood

Intimacy

According to Erikson, the ability to form close, loving relationships; a primary developmental task in late adolescence and early childhood

In Western cultures, what happens to the child-parent relationship as adolescents form their identity?

Adolescents begin to pull away from their parents.

What goes hand in hand with positive parent-teen relationships?


Positive peer relations


Emerging Adulthood

Period from late teens to early 20s bridging the gap between adolescent dependence and full independence and responsible adulthood

Menopause

Natural cessation of menstruation

What happens to strength and stamina as you age?

Decline

Why is physical activity important for older adults?

Physical activity contributes to the strengthening of parts of the body that tend to decline naturally

What happens to senses as you age?

Diminish

What happens to your immune system as your age?

Weakens

What happens to neural processing as your age?

Slows


Describe how older people remember meaningful information as compared to younger people.

Older people are better at recognizing information while younger people are better at recalling.

Cross-sectional studies

A study in which people of different ages are compared with one another

Longitudinal studies

Research in which the same people are restudied and retested over a long period of time

Crystallized intelligence

Our accumulated knowledge and verbal skills; tends to increase with age

Fluid intelligence

Our ability to reason speedily and abstractly; tends to decrease during late childhood

What is terminal decline of mental abilities?

The acceleration of cognitive decline when near death (within 3-4 years)

Is there really a midlife crisis for most people?

Not really' unhappiness, job dissatisfaction, marital dissatisfaction, job loss, etc. don't really surge during the early 40s

Social Clock

The culturally preferred timing of social events such as marriage, parenthood, and retirement

Does living together before marriage lead to less divorce?

No, a study shows that those couples who did cohabit were more likely to divorce than those that didn't

Is there a such thing as "empty nest syndrome" for most couples when their children go off to college?

For the most part, an empty nest is a happy place; many report greater happiness and enjoyment of marriage once children leave.