10 - Roles in the Community Flashcards

1
Q

Early Social Interactions

A

Babies

  • not able to develop full friendships
  • are sensitive to emotional states
  • can have simple social interactions

Preschoolers

  • sharing
  • pretend play

Primary School

  • larger peer group
  • less supervision
  • increase in an interest in playing with same-sex friends
  • pretend play peaks at 6y, then declines
  • increase in verbal and physical aggression

Adolescence

  • peer interactions predominate social interactions
  • increase in cross-sex interactions
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2
Q

Early Childhood Conflict

A

Young Children about 2y
- tend to argue about things

Older Children
- tend to argue about ideas
> older children are better at resolving conflicts themselves

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3
Q

Level of Affiliation

A
  • Social Interactions
  • form relationships (friendships)
  • relationships form larger social groups and communities
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4
Q

Friendships

A

= ongoing reciprocal positive relationship

Infant
- can’t form friendships
Toddlers
- can develop friendships
> start sharing
School age
- more nuanced ideas of friendship
> begin to understand the reciprocity of friendships
+ linked to development of theory of mind
+ increased understanding of others’ mental states
> bullying begins to occur

Stages of friendship development
Ages 7-9
- reward-cost Stage
> expect friends to offer help, share common activities and ideas

Ages 10-11
- Normative Stage
> expect friends to express similar values and attitudes
> develop the idea of loyalty and commitment

Ages 12-13 (adolescence)
- Empathic Stage
> really expect loyalty and commitment
> expect that they engage in self-disclosure
+ share secrets and keep secrets
> start to feel more jealousy of friends
> develop strong expectations of their friends

Advantages of friendships

  • help develop social skills
  • protect against negative events (stresses and loneliness)
  • can be negative (superficial friendships)

Imaginary Companions

  • relatively common
  • slightly more common in girls (barely)
  • usually associated with positive outcomes of cognitive development
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5
Q

Romantic Relationships

A
  • starts in Adolescence
  • tend to initially be full of conflict
    > short but intense

Maturation between 15-17
- older adolescents tend to have longer relationships with deeper bonds and more compromise

  • no association with sexual development
  • more likely associated with culture
Choosing adolescent romantic partners:
- significant correlations between:
 > peer rated popularity
 > peer rated body appeal
 > peer rated physical attractiveness
 > self rated depressive symptoms
- so people who are similar tend to go together
 > peer rated sadness is not a significant correlation
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6
Q

Social Groups

A

Cliques

  • develop in late primary school
  • stable groups of peers where people tend to stay together
  • actively exclude others
  • generally quite small
  • normally one sex

Crowds

  • develop in secondary school (cliques disappear)
  • more often mixed gender
  • groups are bigger and live longer (more stable)
  • defined by shared values or favoured activities
Sociometry
- studying how peers interact with one another
- one way of doing this is to assess the psychometric status using a peer-nomination technique 
 > ask everyone in a class 3 kids you like the most, 3 that you dislike the most
Sociometric Types
Popular
- liked by many, disliked by few
- physically attractive
- friendly, assertive but not aggressive

Rejected
- high number of dislikes
> non-aggressive rejected children
+ tend to have emotional problems (anxiety/depression)
> aggressive rejected children
+ tend to have behavioural problems (aggressive, poor self-control)
- tend to have a hostile attribution bias
> interpret approaches as hostile

Neglected

  • not liked or disliked
  • tend to be shy, withdrawn
  • not associated with any negative outcomes

Controversial

  • liked by many, disliked by many
  • not a very stable category
  • can be popular

Average
- all other kids

*rejected and popular groups tend to be the most stable

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7
Q

Peer interactions

A

0-2

  • not really social
  • don’t share
  • may have joint arousal
  • don’t really have friendships
  • don’t really operate in groups

2-5

  • patterns of play become more elaborate
  • increase in sharing and pretend play
  • start to purposely pick friends
  • some dominant hierarchy, but kids are unaware of their position (not fully developed sense of conceptual self)
5-11
- large increase in social interactions
- development of friendships
- increase in verbal aggression, gossip and bullying
- later on, development of cliques
 > more social comparison

11+

  • peer interactions take over social interactions
  • decreased importance in cliques
  • increased importance in crowds
  • more interaction with the other gender
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8
Q

Social Networks

A

Three-link social influence
- your friend’s friend’s friend
> people up to this level will influence your social category
> fourth link influence is negligible

Lifestyle patterns are related to social networks
- obesity, happiness, smoking, exercise

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9
Q

Parents vs Peers

A
  • from 2.5y kids prefer peer companions to adults

To what extend do you imitate behaviours from parents vs peers?
Study:
- using twin and family designs (done mainly in terms of substance abuse
Results:
- in twins aged 12-30
- regularly drinking parents is associated with a higher risk of regular drinking in the child
- alcohol use of the co-twin was strongly related to alcohol use of the participant
- alcohol use of non-twin siblings is relatively unimportant
- friends’ alcohol use is associated with the individual
- associations diminished in longitudinal analysis

Results:

  • younger group of twins (12-15)
  • early initiation of alcohol use is strongly genetic
  • frequency of drinking is strongly related to shared environmental factors
  • Many other studies find a moderate heritability of alcohol initiation
  • environment might be the more influential factor
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10
Q

Stages of Adulthood

A

Three Broad Stages

  • Early Adulthood (18-40)
  • Middle Adulthood (40-60)
  • Late Adulthood (60+)
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11
Q

Changes in ageing

A
Physical changes in ageing
- physical decline from mid-20s
- strength declines rapidly
 > from 45, muscle strength declines 15% each decade
- endurance declines less rapidly
- people get shorter
- menopause in women
- andropause in men
- decline in visual and auditory systems
 > especially common in males later
- decline in other senses
 > not as rapid
- Parkinson's 
 > loss of dopamine producing cells
 > causes motor and psychological symptoms
- dementia
 > memory loss and decline in problem solving ability
- Alzheimer's 
 > subtype of dementia
- sleep deprivation
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12
Q

The ageing brain

A
  • reduction in plasticity
  • loss of neuronal connections
  • slow brain shrinkage (2% per decade)
    > not all areas of the brain deteriorate at the same speed
    > not all people equally effected
  • ageing well is predicted by both genetic and lifestyle factors
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13
Q

Memory and Intelligence

A
  • fluid intelligence declines with time

- crystallised intelligence remains and may increase with age

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14
Q

Theory of Mind and Ageing

A
  • slightly impaired in elderly
    > the extend of impairment depends on how ToM is measured
  • independent of general cognitive decline in stacks using visual stimuli (RMET)
  • verbal theory of mind tasks correlate with impaired executive functioning and processing speeds
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15
Q

Explaining age-related cognitive change

A

Brain Reserve Hypothesis
- social and cognitive stimulation can help build up reserves of ability and thereby protect against the negative effects on cognitive function in the aged

Study:
- population based sample in Finland
- testing the risk of Alzheimers
- longitudinal study, assessed around 50 and 70
- assessed marital status, cognitive functioning and blood sample
> to test whether they were carriers of the ApoEe4 gene
+ increased risk in Alzheimers

Results:
- showed that those with ApoEe4 gene had a higher risk of Alzheimers
- within the group that had the ApoEe4 gene, those who had been widowed or divorced in both mid-life and later life were at a much higher risk of Alzheimers
> showing there is a social as well as genetic risk of developing Alzheimers
+ Social-Genetic Model
> may be that social interactions help protect against cognitive impairment
> this result was not found in those that had not married or cohabited, showing that it is specifically the loss of a partner that increases risk the most

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16
Q

Dealing with Cognitive Ageing

A

2 components can help
Optimisation
- selecting a goal and practicing that particular skill
- resulting in specialised expertise

Compensation
- changing behaviour to make up for losses in cognitive ability
> use a shopping list to go shopping to compensate for memory loss (loss of skill)

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17
Q

Types of Ageing

A

Successful Ageing
- thriving for a long time
Pathological Ageing
- sharp decline around the mid 60s

Successful Ageing
- maintain good physical health
- retain cognitive abilities
- retain engagement with social and productive activities
 > use it or lose it

Study:
- French study of elderly, self-employed shopkeepers and craft workers
Results:
- those that opted for a later retirement age had a reduced risk of dementia
- but you cannot exclude reverse causation explanation
> people retired earlier because they were feeling the consequences of ageing already

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18
Q

Personality and Ageing

A

General trends
- increase in agreeability
- increase in conscientiousness beginning at 20
> related to entering the workforce
- increase in openness to experience
> large jump in teenage years, more risk taking
+ could be due to an immature frontal cortex, but a mature striatum

  • people’s relative position within cohorts is relatively stable
  • generally people become happier with age
    > could be due to Positivity Bias
    > tend to think more positively about the world, mind less, as you age

Test:
- shown a series of pictures, some positive events, some neutral and some negative
Results:
- younger people had better recall overall
- those at a later age are less likely to remember the negative events
> amygdala (emotions) shows markedly less activation in response to negative stimuli than positive stimuli in older adults
> amygdala shows similar activity for positive and negative results

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19
Q

Psychodynamic Approach to Stages of Life

A

Erikson’s 8 Stages

  • each stage is defined by a different psychosocial conflict
  • related to particular ages and relationships (culturally and contextually)

(stage)
(most important relationship)
(psychological conflict)
Stages:

Infancy (0-1.5)
- primary caregiver
- trust vs mistrust
> parent responding to infant’s needs develops trust

Toddler (1.5-3)
- parents
- autonomy vs shame/doubt
> exploring vs restriction

Preschool (3-6)
- family
- initiative vs guilt
> too much restraint causes guilt

Childhood (6-12)
- neighbourhood/school
- industry vs inferiority
> goal-related tasks help develop this

Adolescence (12-18)
- peer group
- identity vs role confusion
> introspective personal development

Young Adulthood (18-30)

  • partners and friends
  • intimacy vs isolation

Middle Age (30-50)
- family and coworkers
- generativity vs stagnation
> in relation to family

Later Adulthood (50+)

  • mankind (reflection)
  • integrity vs despair
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20
Q

Levinson’s Life Structures

A

Life Structure
- underpinning pattern of an adults life at a particular point in time

4 Structures
- Pre-Adulthood
- Early Adulthood
 > initial choice of love and lifestyle are important
- Middle Adulthood
 > settling down in career and family
 > reevaluating life, could be related to feelings of uncertainty 
  \+ mid-life crisis
- Late Adulthood
 > reflection on successes and failures
  \+ ideally acceptance
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21
Q

Early Social Interactions

A

Babies

  • not able to develop full friendships
  • are sensitive to emotional states
  • can have simple social interactions

Preschoolers

  • sharing
  • pretend play

Primary School

  • larger peer group
  • less supervision
  • increase in an interest in playing with same-sex friends
  • pretend play peaks at 6y, then declines
  • increase in verbal and physical aggression

Adolescence

  • peer interactions predominate social interactions
  • increase in cross-sex interactions
22
Q

Early Childhood conflict

A

Young Children about 2y
- tend to argue about things

Older Children
- tend to argue about ideas
> older children are better at resolving conflicts themselves

23
Q

Levels of affiliation

A
  • Social Interactions
  • form relationships (friendships)
  • relationships form larger social groups and communities
24
Q

What is a friendship and when does it develop?

A

Friendship = an ongoing reciprocal positive relationship

- first develops in toddlers, as they start sharing

25
Q

3 stages of childhood friendship development

A

Ages 7-9
- reward-cost Stage
> expect friends to offer help, share common activities and ideas

Ages 10-11
- Normative Stage
> expect friends to express similar values and attitudes
> develop the idea of loyalty and commitment

Ages 12-13 (adolescence)
- Empathic Stage
> really expect loyalty and commitment
> expect that they engage in self-disclosure
+ share secrets and keep secrets
> start to feel more jealousy of friends
> develop strong expectations of their friends

26
Q

Imaginary Companions

A
  • relatively common
  • slightly more common in girls (barely)
  • usually associated with positive outcomes of cognitive development
27
Q

When do romantic relationships start and what are the factors for partner choosing?

A
  • starts in Adolescence
  • tend to initially be full of conflict
    > short but intense

Maturation between 15-17
- older adolescents tend to have longer relationships with deeper bonds and more compromise

  • no association with sexual development
  • more likely associated with culture
Choosing adolescent romantic partners:
- significant correlations between:
 > peer rated popularity
 > peer rated body appeal
 > peer rated physical attractiveness
 > self rated depressive symptoms
- so people who are similar tend to go together
 > peer rated sadness is not a significant correlation
28
Q

Cliques and Crowds

A

Cliques

  • develop in late primary school
  • stable groups of peers where people tend to stay together
  • actively exclude others
  • generally quite small
  • normally one sex

Crowds

  • develop in secondary school (cliques disappear)
  • more often mixed gender
  • groups are bigger and live longer (more stable)
  • defined by shared values or favoured activities
29
Q

Define Sociometry

A
  • studying how peers interact with one another
  • one way of doing this is to assess the psychometric status using a peer-nomination technique
    > ask everyone in a class 3 kids you like the most, 3 that you dislike the most
30
Q

Sociometric Types

A

Popular

  • liked by many, disliked by few
  • physically attractive
  • friendly, assertive but not aggressive

Rejected
- high number of dislikes
> non-aggressive rejected children
+ tend to have emotional problems (anxiety/depression)
> aggressive rejected children
+ tend to have behavioural problems (aggressive, poor self-control)
- tend to have a hostile attribution bias
> interpret approaches as hostile

Neglected

  • not liked or disliked
  • tend to be shy, withdrawn
  • not associated with any negative outcomes

Controversial

  • liked by many, disliked by many
  • not a very stable category
  • can be popular

Average
- all other kids

*rejected and popular groups tend to be the most stable

31
Q
Peer interactions 
0-2
2-5
5-11
11+
A

0-2

  • not really social
  • don’t share
  • may have joint arousal
  • don’t really have friendships
  • don’t really operate in groups

2-5

  • patterns of play become more elaborate
  • increase in sharing and pretend play
  • start to purposely pick friends
  • some dominant hierarchy, but kids are unaware of their position (not fully developed sense of conceptual self)
5-11
- large increase in social interactions
- development of friendships
- increase in verbal aggression, gossip and bullying
- later on, development of cliques
 > more social comparison

11+

  • peer interactions take over social interactions
  • decreased importance in cliques
  • increased importance in crowds
  • more interaction with the other gender
32
Q

The Three-link social influence

A
  • your friend’s friend’s friend
    > people up to this level will influence your social category
    > fourth link influence is negligible
33
Q

What age do children prefer peers to adults?

A

from 2.5y

34
Q

Study on behaviour imitation from parents vs peers

A

Study:
- using twin and family designs (done mainly in terms of substance abuse

Results:

  • in twins aged 12-30
  • regularly drinking parents is associated with a higher risk of regular drinking in the child
  • alcohol use of the co-twin was strongly related to alcohol use of the participant
  • alcohol use of non-twin siblings is relatively unimportant
  • friends’ alcohol use is associated with the individual
  • associations diminished in longitudinal analysis

Results:

  • younger group of twins (12-15)
  • early initiation of alcohol use is strongly genetic
  • frequency of drinking is strongly related to shared environmental factors
  • Many other studies find a moderate heritability of alcohol initiation
  • environment might be the more influential factor
35
Q

3 Broad stages of adulthood

A
  • Early Adulthood (18-40)
  • Middle Adulthood (40-60)
  • Late Adulthood (60+)
36
Q

Changes in ageing

A
Physical changes in ageing
- physical decline from mid-20s
- strength declines rapidly
 > from 45, muscle strength declines 15% each decade
- endurance declines less rapidly
- people get shorter
- menopause in women
- andropause in men
- decline in visual and auditory systems
 > especially common in males later
- decline in other senses
 > not as rapid
- Parkinson's 
 > loss of dopamine producing cells
 > causes motor and psychological symptoms
- dementia
 > memory loss and decline in problem solving ability
- Alzheimer's 
 > subtype of dementia
- sleep deprivation
37
Q

What happens to the brain with age?

A
  • reduction in plasticity
  • loss of neuronal connections
  • slow brain shrinkage (2% per decade)
    > not all areas of the brain deteriorate at the same speed
    > not all people equally effected
  • ageing well is predicted by both genetic and lifestyle factors
38
Q

Memory and intelligence with ageing

A
  • fluid intelligence declines with time

- crystallised intelligence remains and may increase with age

39
Q

Crystallised intelligence

A

acquired knowledge and skills relating to specific information

40
Q

Fluid Intelligence

A

Fluid intelligence is the general ability to think abstractly, reason, identify patterns, solve problems, and discern relationships.

41
Q

Theory of Mind and ageing

A
  • slightly impaired in elderly
    > the extend of impairment depends on how ToM is measured
  • independent of general cognitive decline in stacks using visual stimuli (RMET)
  • verbal theory of mind tasks correlate with impaired executive functioning and processing speeds
42
Q

Brain Reserve Hypothesis

A
  • social and cognitive stimulation can help build up reserves of ability and thereby protect against the negative effects on cognitive function in the aged
43
Q

Study on the brain reserve hypothesis

A

Results:
- showed that those with ApoEe4 gene had a higher risk of Alzheimers
- within the group that had the ApoEe4 gene, those who had been widowed or divorced in both mid-life and later life were at a much higher risk of Alzheimers
> showing there is a social as well as genetic risk of developing Alzheimers
+ Social-Genetic Model
> may be that social interactions help protect against cognitive impairment
> this result was not found in those that had not married or cohabited, showing that it is specifically the loss of a partner that increases risk the most

Study:
- population based sample in Finland
- testing the risk of Alzheimers
- longitudinal study, assessed around 50 and 70
- assessed marital status, cognitive functioning and blood sample
> to test whether they were carriers of the ApoEe4 gene
+ increased risk in Alzheimers

44
Q

2 components that can help deal with cognitive ageing
Optimisation
Compensation

A

Optimisation

  • selecting a goal and practicing that particular skill
  • resulting in specialised expertise

Compensation
- changing behaviour to make up for losses in cognitive ability
> use a shopping list to go shopping to compensate for memory loss (loss of skill)

45
Q

2 types of ageing

A

Successful Ageing
- thriving for a long time

Pathological Ageing
- sharp decline around the mid 60s

46
Q

French study on successful ageing

A

Results:
- those that opted for a later retirement age had a reduced risk of dementia
- but you cannot exclude reverse causation explanation
> people retired earlier because they were feeling the consequences of ageing already

Study:
- French study of elderly, self-employed shopkeepers and craft workers

47
Q

Personality and ageing

A

General trends
- increase in agreeability

  • increase in conscientiousness beginning at 20
    > related to entering the workforce
  • increase in openness to experience
    > large jump in teenage years, more risk taking
    + could be due to an immature frontal cortex, but a mature striatum
  • people’s relative position within cohorts is relatively stable
  • generally people become happier with age
    > could be due to Positivity Bias
    > tend to think more positively about the world, mind less, as you age
48
Q

Test of ageing and personality

A

Results:
- younger people had better recall overall
- those at a later age are less likely to remember the negative events
> amygdala (emotions) shows markedly less activation in response to negative stimuli than positive stimuli in older adults
> amygdala shows similar activity for positive and negative results

Test:
- shown a series of pictures, some positive events, some neutral and some negative

49
Q
Erikson's 8 stages of life
(psychodynamic approach)
- infancy
- toddler
- preschool
- childhood
- adolescence
- young adulthood
- middle age
- later adulthood
A
  • each stage is defined by a different psychosocial conflict
  • related to particular ages and relationships (culturally and contextually)

(stage)
(most important relationship)
(psychological conflict)
Stages:

Infancy (0-1.5)
- primary caregiver
- trust vs mistrust
> parent responding to infant’s needs develops trust

Toddler (1.5-3)
- parents
- autonomy vs shame/doubt
> exploring vs restriction

Preschool (3-6)
- family
- initiative vs guilt
> too much restraint causes guilt

Childhood (6-12)
- neighbourhood/school
- industry vs inferiority
> goal-related tasks help develop this

Adolescence (12-18)
- peer group
- identity vs role confusion
> introspective personal development

Young Adulthood (18-30)

  • partners and friends
  • intimacy vs isolation

Middle Age (30-50)
- family and coworkers
- generativity vs stagnation
> in relation to family

Later Adulthood (50+)

  • mankind (reflection)
  • integrity vs despair
50
Q

Levinson’s 4 life structures

A

Life Structure
- underpinning pattern of an adults life at a particular point in time

4 Structures
- Pre-Adulthood

  • Early Adulthood
    > initial choice of love and lifestyle are important
  • Middle Adulthood
    > settling down in career and family
    > reevaluating life, could be related to feelings of uncertainty
    + mid-life crisis
  • Late Adulthood
    > reflection on successes and failures
    + ideally acceptance