Exam 2 Questions Flashcards

1
Q

Freud’s Explanation of Attachment

A

Biological drives; satisfaction of physiological needs

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2
Q

Bowlby’s Explanation of Attachment (Ethological)

A

Warm Intimate relationship with attached figure (parent, etc)

lack thereof could lead to issues in social-emotional development

Expanded upon by Hrlows wire VS cloth mother Experiment

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3
Q

What is attachment?

A

Emotional bonds that children form with their caregiver at about 7 - 9 months

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4
Q

Bowlby Phases of Attachment

A
  1. Pre attachment

Crying or smiling to yield psychological needs from caretaker

  1. Attachment-in-the-making

Preference for familiar people

  1. Clear-cut attachment

Secure base
Separation anxiety

  1. Reciprocal relationship phase

interaction and communication
Interconnectivity

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5
Q

Intersubjectivity

A

Intersubjectivity is the shared, reciprocal, experience between the parent and child whereby the experience of each is having an impact on the experience of the other.

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6
Q

Mirror Neurons

A

Specialized brain cells that fire when an individual sees or hears another perform an action, just as they would fire if the observing individual
were performing the same action.

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7
Q

Emotion

A

A feeling state that involves distinctive physiological reactions and cognitive evaluations and that motivates action.

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8
Q

Examples of Emotional Regulation

A

Pouting

Effects of maternal depression

Individualistic vs. collectivistic cultures

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9
Q

Maternal depression: Obstacle to intersubjectivity

A

Infant-caregiver interactions routinely disorganized and unresponsive to emotional interactions

Infants learn over time to disengage

Infant reaction less strong in still-face reaction

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10
Q

Bowlby Separation from Attachment

A

Children first become frantic with fear  then experience despair and depression  then become indifferent to other people (detachment)

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11
Q

Ainsworth Strange Situation

A

Strange Situation:

a laboratory procedure designed to assess children’s attachment

Rated :

the child’s use of their mother as a secure base for exploration,

the child’s reactions to being left alone with a stranger and then completely alone

the child’s response when they are reunited with their mother.

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12
Q

Secure attachment

A

Children play comfortably and react positively to stranger as long as mother is present.

become upset when mother leaves and are unlikely to be consoled by a stranger

calm down as soon as their mother reappears.

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13
Q

Avoidant attachment:

A

Children are indifferent to where mother is sitting

may or may not cry when mother leaves

as likely to be comforted by strangers as by mother,

indifferent when mother returns to the room.

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14
Q

Resistant attachment

A

children stay close to mother

appear anxious even when mother is near

become very upset when their mother leaves but are not comforted by her return

simultaneously seek renewed contact with their mother and resist their mother’s efforts to comfort them.

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15
Q

Disorganized attachment

A

lack a coherent method for dealing with stress.

may behave in seemingly contradictory ways (screaming for their mother but moving away when she approaches)

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16
Q

Primary intersubjectivity

A

Organized, reciprocal interaction between an infant and a caregiver, with the interaction itself as the focus.

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17
Q

Secondary Intersubjectivity

A

Form of interaction between infant and caregiver with communication and emotional sharing focused not just on the interaction but on the world beyond

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18
Q

Kiley and colleagues Morality Theory

A

Babies only gradually learn about right and wrong

Emotions such as empathy, shame, and guilt are gradually developed

19
Q

Scola and colleagues Morality Theory

A

Humans have rudimentary moral sense from the start of life

Capacity for moral sense is deeply rooted in human species

20
Q

Sense of Self

A

Developed around 6 months as baby becomes more capable and therefore more self reliant.

21
Q

Development of self consciousness

A

Embarrassment, pride, shame, guilt, and envy emerge after 8 months with infants’ growing consciousness of self

22
Q

Erikson Trust and Autonomy Stages

A

Basic trust versus mistrust

Warm and responsive parenting fosters development of trust

Unresponsive, insensitive, or disorganized parenting fosters mistrust of people and wariness of world

Autonomy versus shame

Parent-structured child environment that fosters success in early, self-initiated efforts at mastery and control builds child autonomy

Overly controlling parents that fail to create contexts in which child competence can be demonstrated foster sense of doubt and shame in a child

23
Q

Cross-cultural research on attachment

A

Position 1: Attachment is universal (similar across cultures)
Position 2: attachment theory (epistemologically) is biased
Position 3: intersection. There are universal and culturally specific characteristics

24
Q

Detachment

A

For Bowlby, the state of indifference toward others experienced by children who have been separated from their caregivers for an extended
time and have not formed new stable relationships

25
Q

basic trust versus mistrust

A

For Erikson, the first stage of infancy, during which children either come to trust others as reliable and kind and to regard the world as safe
or come to mistrust others as insensitive and hurtful and to regard the world as unpredictable and threatening.

26
Q

autonomy versus shame and doubt

A

For Erikson, the second stage of infancy, during which children develop a sense of themselves as competent to accomplish tasks or as not
competent.

27
Q

Beginnings of a self-system

A

children’s increasing self-awareness;

growing sensitivity to adults’ standards of what is good;

new awareness of their own ability to live up to those standards;

ability to create plans of their own and judge them against adult standards;

strong desire to see that their plans are not thwarted by adults

28
Q

Preoperational stage (Erikson)

A

Young children can represent reality to themselves through the use of symbols, including mental images, words, and gestures. Objects and events no longer have to be present to be thought about, but children often fail to distinguish their point of view from that of others; become easily captured by surface appearances; and are often confused about causal relations.

29
Q

Piagetian Preoperational Stage

A

Transition stage between infant sensorimotor intelligence and fully operational intelligence in middle childhood

Characterized by inability to decenter thinking or think through consequences of actions

30
Q

Centration

A

Young children’s tendency to focus on only one feature of an object to the exclusion of all other features

Greatest limitation to young children’s cognition (Piaget)

31
Q

Decentration

A

Cognitive ability to pull away from focusing on just one feature of an object to consider multiple features

32
Q

Egocentrism

A

Tendency to consider the world entirely in terms of one’s own point of view

33
Q

Precausal reasoning

A

Young children’s reasoning does not follow the procedures of either deductive or inductive reasoning

Difficulty understanding cause and effect

34
Q

Deductive reasoning

A

from general premises to particular cases

35
Q

Inductive reasoning

A

from particular cases to general principles

36
Q

Transductive reasoning

A

from one particular to another.

37
Q

Elaborative style

A

A form of talking with children about new events or experiences that enhances children’s memories for those events and experiences.

38
Q

The Domain of Psychology

A

Naïve psychology

Theory of mind

False-belief task

39
Q

Naïve biology

A

Animate and inanimate objects

Important differences between living things often overlooked

EG: The cup and tube task where children expect the ball to fall from cup A to cup A

40
Q

Theory of mind

A

A child’s coherent theory about how people’s beliefs, desires, and mental states combine to shape their actions.

Crayon Box Test: Assume crayons, actually candles

41
Q

False-belief task

A

A research technique used in theory of mind studies in which children must infer that another person does not possess knowledge that they possess

42
Q

Modularity theory

A

Explained in terms of distinct and separate mental modules

43
Q

Theory theory

A

Young children have primitive theories about how the world works, which influence how children think about, and act within, specific domains