Fundamentals on Adulthood and Aging Flashcards

1
Q

What are the types of aging?

A
  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Tertiary
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2
Q

Primary Aging

A
  • Something that everyone experiences, and disease-free development, thus called normative
  • Differences in intensity, how much, how quickly and when it happens
  • Examples: Puberty, menopause, cognitive and sensory changes
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3
Q

Secondary Aging

A
  • Changes that some humans experience and not others, thus called non-normative
  • Related to different environmental changes, injuries or illnesses
    Examples: Trauma, skiing accidents, diabetes, cancer, radiation
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4
Q

Tertiary Aging

A
  • Happens at the end of life
  • Signals impending death where functions drop significantly
  • Not universal, seems to happen a few years in advance for some people
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5
Q

What are 3 ways of conceptualizing age?

A
  • Chronological age: time since birth, a poor proxy for development as it doesnt say much of development, elapsed time
  • Perceived age: Your on perception of your age, often in relation to your chronological age. Something you have to ask the person
  • Sociocultural age: perceptions of others or of yourself, tied to chronological age, hat you should or shouldnt do “at your age”, cultural expectations ‘, expectations
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6
Q

What is the lifespan perspective?

A
  • Placing adulthood in a bigger and broader context
  • To understand how my friend is like now as adult, I need to take into consideration of her early phase (childhood and adolescent)
  • Need of different types of perspectives
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7
Q

What are the four key features in life-time perspective?

A
  • Multidirectionality
    Losses and gains, a balance throughout life
  • Plasticity
    Nothing is set in stone from the get go, we change and adapt to the environment we are in. To a degree, and declines with age
  • Historical Context
    Our past experiences, our culture in which we grew up in influence how we age
  • Multiple causation
    How we develop is caused by different sources, its a dynamic system that happens in it specific context
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8
Q

What influences shapes development?

A
  • Genetic influences
    Nature
  • Physical and social contexts
    Nurture
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9
Q

What are the genetic influences on development?

A
  • Gene-environment correlations
  • Gene-environment interactions
  • Epigenetic inheritance
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10
Q

Gene-environment correlation

A

On how they work together, their associations
- Passive
Environment supportive of both parent and offspring genes, what works for me should work for my children
- Evocative
Different types of phenotype variation leads to different environmental responses, such as halo effect
- Active
Niche picking based on phenotype, happens in adolescent

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11
Q

Genetic-environment interactions

A

Phenotype expressed only when triggered by environment
- Vulnerable for depression

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12
Q

Epigenetic inheritance

A

When an environmental trigger cause a change in phenotype

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13
Q

Examples on how the physical context can shape development

A

Conditions of the physical space
- The amount of oxygen
- Water and food supply
- Living conditions
- Cause of stress, second hand smoking

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14
Q

What are the developmental influences?

A
  • Normative age-graded
  • Normative history-graded
  • Non-normative
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15
Q

Normative age-graded

A
  • Experienced by the majority of the population
  • Its widespread
  • Often experienced at a specific age or age range; going to school, getting a job, physiological changes
  • Inherent changes
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16
Q

Normative history-graded

A
  • Experienced by the majority of the population
  • Happened during specific historical periods such as illnesses(covid) or changes in attitude (women’s right, retirement)
  • Biological: illnesses
  • Psychological: ageism
  • Socio-cultural: beliefs about gender, when one should get children and settle down
  • Cohort; experiences and circumstances that are unique to a specific generation, affect underpinnings
17
Q

Longevity

A
  • Average: at the age where half of the people in any given year is dead
  • Maximum: Oldest known age
18
Q

Expectancy

A
  • Active: years expected to live healthy and independent
  • Dependent: years of living after relying on others to survive
19
Q

What are reasons as to why we live longer than humans did 100 years ago?

A
  • Better living conditions
  • Better healthcare systems, lower rates of childbirth
  • Better education
    Leads to well paid job, more opportunities and more money, knowledge
  • Advances with technology
20
Q

What influence our longevity and life expectancy?

A

Genetic factors
- How old were my grandparents at time of death
- 25%
Environmental factors
- Combination with genes
- SES, poverty vs higher class?
- Lifestyle
- Exposure to illness and/or toxins (pollution)
Interactive factors
- Ethnicity
- Gender

21
Q

What is the Hayflick limit?

A
  • Part of a cellular theory on why we age
  • A phenomena where cells have a fixed number of divisions that can limit the life span
22
Q

What cause the cells to limit their number of divisions?

A
  • Evidence suggests it is due to telomeres, protective covering, shortening with each division, 40-60 times
  • Caused by a stress response and DNA damage
  • Enzyme telomerase needed for DNA replication to fully reproduce but is not present in somatic cells
  • Regulates reproduction of telomeres
  • We dont get to the limit
23
Q

Genetic Programming Theories

A

Aging programmed into our genetic code
- Caused by cell death, appears random but could be underlying cause
- Innate ability to self-destruct
- Dying cells triggering key processes in other cells (external factors)
- How is it triggered and how does it work
- Evidence supporting it is that many illnesses is associated with genetic aspects
- Very ambiguous, few research, is it possible to answer this? How could we find out?