Unit 1 - Intro to HHG Flashcards

1
Q

Social development

A

The stage where developing people learn the rules of what behaviour is acceptable within the culture/environment they’re developing in

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2
Q

Emotional development

A

The stage of emotional development is where developing people form attachments to specific people, they care about how these people think and feel and tend to seek them out in times of need; such as distress, illness, and tiredness

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3
Q

Physical development

A

Major physiological changes to the body occur, as well as including gaining the ability to perform certain motor tasks.

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4
Q

Cognitive or intellectual development

A

Developing people are acquiring the ability to understand the world around them in regards to gaining information and developing ways of thinking.

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5
Q

Five development principals

A
  1. Development is interrelated
    Each area of dev’t has an impact on another area of development.
    Eg. A child learning to feed themselves uses trial and error (Cognitive development) to learn fine motor skills (Physical development)
  2. Development is similar for all
    Development follows a pattern.
    Eg. All children sit before standing, and stand before walking
  3. Rates of development are individual
    No two children develop at exactly the same rate.
  4. Development is ongoing
    Development doesn’t stop at a certain age. The process is often referred to as life-span development.
  5. Development is sequential
    People learn skills that build upon earlier development. Development follows a sequence, or step-by-step pattern.
    Eg: A child learns to run and jump before skipping, a child learns the alphabet before learning to spell
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6
Q

What can affect de’vt

A
  • Parental care
  • Genes
  • Access to educ’n
    -Mental state
  • Relationships
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7
Q

Development life cycle

A
  1. Prenatal (conception to Birth)
  2. Infancy & Toddlerhood (birth- 3 yrs)
  3. Early childhood (3-6 yrs.)
  4. Middle Childhood (6-12 yrs.)
  5. Adolescence (12-20 yrs.)
  6. Young Adulthood (20-40 yrs.)
  7. Middle Age (40-65 yrs.)
  8. Late Adulthood (65+ yrs.)
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8
Q

Prenatal stage

A
  • Conception to birth
  • develop major organs
  • sense of hearing
  • bone and facial structure
  • brain development
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9
Q

Infancy and toddlerhood

A
  • Birth to 3 years
  • learn to walk
  • speech development
  • potty training
  • learning to socialize with family
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10
Q

Early childhood

A
  • 3-6yrs
  • learning to socialize with friends
  • going to school
  • naming colours, letters
  • basic motor skills
  • learning acceptable behaviour
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11
Q

Middle childhood

A
  • 6-12yrs
  • development of empathy
  • lose baby teeth
  • surface level problem solving
  • develop own interests/independence
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12
Q

Adolescence

A
  • 12-20yrs
  • puberty
  • body image
  • romantic relationships
  • first job/independence
  • major brain development
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13
Q

Young adulthood

A
  • 20-40yrs
  • career related motor skills
  • long term relationships/marriage
  • first house/car
  • developing maturity
  • parenthood
  • physical peak
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14
Q

Middle age

A
  • 40-65yrs
  • decreased fluid intelligence
  • become grandparents
  • peak of career
  • retirement
  • metabolism slows down
  • harder to maintain/gain muscle
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15
Q

Late adulthood

A
  • 65+ yrs
  • hearing/vision decline
  • forgetful
  • reaction time slows
  • face death
  • diminished role in society
  • loneliness
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16
Q

Scientific method

A
  1. Phenomen/Question
  2. Hypothesis
  3. Experiment/study
  4. Results
  5. conclusions
  6. Theory
  7. Other scientists review and revise
  8. Hypothesis…
    (Alternative 6s)
    6.Additional Hypothesis
    7.Hypothesis…
    (Alternate)
    6.Reject and revise hypothesis
    7.Hypothesis…
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17
Q

Naturalistic Observation

A

Researcher watches and records activity of subjects in their natural environment while avoiding interference
E.G. watch monkey learn to use rock
Goods
- Learns naturally thru watching
Bads
- Researcher’s presence could taint results

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18
Q

Case studies

A
  • intensive investigation of one or more participants (person, group, community)
  • a combination of methods is used including: long term observation, diaries etc
    E.G. Jeremy has a fear, psychologist has him keep a diary of his experiences, and collects a detailed account of his childhood
    Goods
  • can gather a full history of a person
  • serves as the basis for new hypothesis that could be tested in controlled situations

Bads
- cannot be used to make conclusions on its own
- results are individual and cannot be generalized

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19
Q

Surveys

A
  • Information is obtained by asking individuals a fixed set of questions
  • Two types include interview and questionnaire
    E.G. Questionnaire provided to new parents asking questions about their parenting practices and their child’s behaviour

Goods
- Practical
- Time efficient
- Can obtain uniform results
- Questionnaire limit researcher influence

Bads
- interviews can result in misleading answers
- must ensure that questionnaires accurately examine the intended subject
- requires trust of the participant

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20
Q

Longitudinal Studies

A
  • Data collected about a group of participants over a long period of time, at regular intervals
  • Used to determine the progression or development of various characteristics
    E.G. Psychologist studying whether personality is fairly stable or unstable examines the same group of children from age 1-25

Goods
- Good format to study consistencies and inconsistencies in behaviour

Bads
- Time consuming
- Expensive
- May lose track of participants which can affect results

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21
Q

Cross Sectional Studies

A

Participants organized into groups based on age, and studied so that age related differences can be compared
E.G. psychologist wanting to study short term memory capacity provide children ages 5, 10, 15 with a series of words and ask them to recall the list

Goods
- less expensive than longitudinal
- no risk of losing participants
- shorter time span for results

Bads
- Results could be attributed to differences other than age

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22
Q

Correlations and Explanations

A
  • The measure of a relationship between two variables or sets of data
  • Examining two sets of data and attempting to justify the relationship between the two sets
    E.G. Examining various socioeconomic status groups and the percentage of children that attend post-secondary education

Goods
- Cost effective
- Data that already exists can be used

Bads
- Does not determine causation
- Less control of other factors

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23
Q

Experiments

A
  • utilizes the scientific method to investigate a question and test a hypothesis
  • the hypothesis outlines the variables (conditions, behaviours subject to change)
    E.G. The ability for students to concentrate as the temperature increases

Goods
- High control over the situation
- Decrease interference from outside variables

Bads
- research questions require additional experiments in order for results to be replicated before conclusions/theories can be accepted
- can be difficult to limit the influence of hidden flaws
- can be difficult to decide on the best independent/dependent variables to answer a question

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24
Q

Independent variable

A

The condition that the experimenter changes

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25
Q

Dependent variable

A

Condition that varies as a function of the independent variable (dependent on the independent)

26
Q

What is correlation

A
  • Mutual relationship or connection between two or more things.
  • Just because there is a relationship between 2 things does not mean one thing CAUSES another to happen.
27
Q

What are perfect correlations?

A

Correlation of +/-1

28
Q

What is negative correlation?

A

On a graph, the line is going down (left to right)

In text, as one factor increases (free time) another factor decreases (stress)

29
Q

What is positive correlation?

A

On a graph, the line is going up(left to right)

In text, both factors increase or decrease.
E.G.
- As number of cats go up, happiness increases
- As number of legs goes down, ability to walk goes down

30
Q

Theoretical perspectives

A
  • Psychoanalytic
  • Cognitive
  • Behaviour
  • Humanistic
  • Biological
  • Socio-cultural
  • Evolutionary
31
Q

Psychoanalytic

A

Emphasizes unconscious drives and conflicts

Bads and Qs
How can someone’s behaviour be explained in terms of unconscious drives, conflicts and memories?

32
Q

Cognitive

A

Behaviour is the result of our mental interpretation of our experiences

Bads and Qs
How do mental processes influence behaviour?

33
Q

Behaviour

A

Behaviour is primarily shaped by learning. People respond to stimulus cues, reward and punishment

Bads and Qs
What are the ‘laws’ that associate our responses with stimulus conditions?

34
Q

Humanistic

A

Emphasizes human growth and potential influenced by self concept and personal growth

Bads and Qs
How much of behaviour and development is the result of free will?

35
Q

Biological

A

Determined by genetics, brain structure and biological chemicals

Bads and Qs
Do heredity, the nervous and endocrine systems produce behaviour and mental processes?

36
Q

Socio-cultural

A

Emphasize culture, social norms and social learning

Bads and Qs
How are social influences different across cultures?

37
Q

Evolutionary

A

Behaviour has developed and adapted over time due to natural selection

Bads and Qs
How do behaviour and individual differences develop and change?

38
Q

Mean

A

Add them all, divide by number of items added together

39
Q

Mode

A

Most frequently occurring number (There can be more than one)

40
Q

Median

A

Middle number when data is sorted low to high

41
Q

Measures of variability

A
  • Range
  • Standard deviation
42
Q

Range

A
  • Difference between highest and lowest values in a set of data
  • Range = highest value - lowest value
43
Q

Standard deviation

A
  • more accurate and more common measure of variance
  • all points of data factor into the calculation
    every score from the mean
  • large/high deviation = spread out data
  • small/ low deviation = bunched up data
    (Theres a stupid equation)
44
Q

Stratified data

A

purposely selecting participants that proportionately represent subgroups found within the population (age, location, gender, religion, education)

E.G. Total
School population
Grade 9s: 600/2121 = 28%
Grade 10s: 521/2121 = 25%
Grade 11s: 603/2121 = 28%
Grade 12s: 397/2121 = 19%

Data collected
Grade 9s: 28/100 = 28%
Grade 10s: 25/100 = 25%
Grade 11s: 28/100 = 28%
Grade 12s: 19/100 = 19%

45
Q

Random data

A

selecting participants without any sort of characteristics, or qualifiers as criteria. All people in the population are equally as likely to be selected

46
Q

Hindsight bias

A

Recently acquired knowledge influences the recollection of past info. We will look back on an even that we couldn’t predict at the time and think the outcome was easily predictable

47
Q

Overconfidence

A

When ones subjective confidence in their own ability is greater than their performance

48
Q

Critical thinking

A

The ability to process, analyze, and evaluate information to use as a guide to action or belief/hypothesis

49
Q

Sample

A
  • fairly small group of people that should represent the total population being studied
  • A population can be as specific or as broad as the researcher desires (Canadians, females, high school seniors)
50
Q

Ethical standards

A
  • Protecting the welfare and confidentiality of all participants
  • Obey provincial and federal laws
  • Participants must agree to be a part of the study (give their consent)
  • Deception should only be used if no alternative is possible (debriefing must occur after the deception)
  • Information or outcomes of the study must be made available to participants
51
Q

Researcher bias

A
  • The expectations of the person conducting the research may influence the results.

Can be minimized by:
- Placebo- an inert or innocuous substance used especially in controlled experiments testing the efficacy of another substance (such as a drug)
- Single blind experiment- the researcher is aware of who has the placebo
- Double blind experiment- the researcher is unaware of who has the placebo
- Objective and subjective observations

52
Q

Control variable

A

All other factors that are kept the same

53
Q

Experimental group

A

Group of participants in a research study who are exposed to a particular manipulation of the independent variable

54
Q

Control group

A

Not assigned any manipulatable conditions

55
Q

Hypothesis

A

A supposition or proposed explanation made on the basis of limited evidence as a starting point for further investigation

56
Q

Replicate

A

make an exact copy of; reproduce

57
Q

Survey

A

Study in which a group of participants is selected from a population and data about or opinions from those participants are collected, measured, and analyzed

58
Q

Target Population

A

The population that a study is intended to research and to which generalizations from samples are to be made

59
Q

Sample

A

A subset of a population of interest that is selected for study with the aim of making inferences to the population. It is important to ensure that a sample is representative of the larger population.

60
Q

Volunteer Bias

A

Volunteer bias (also called self-selection bias) arises in any research study in which participants choose if they want to be part of the sample

61
Q

Case study

A

An in-depth investigation of a single individual, family, event, or other entity. Multiple types of data (psychological, physiological, biographical, environmental) are assembled, for example, to understand an individual’s background, relationships, and behavior

62
Q

Informed consent

A

The participant is aware of the experiment, what occurs, what will happen, and are allowed to back out at anytime