Week 11 - Human Development Flashcards
What is developmental psychology?
The study of how behaviour changes over the life span.
Change can occur due to physical maturation, be shaped by experience or a combination of both.
Thus, both nature - our genetic makeup- and nurture - the shaping environment and our experiences - play powerful roles in shaping development.
Example of complexity in nature vs. nurture debate (Hart and Ridely)
Hart and Ridley (1995) published a study that showed that parents who speak to their children a lot produce children with larger vocabularies than parents who do not speak to their offspring as much.
This provides evidence for the powerful effects environmental influence on children’s vocabulary right?
Or could it be that parents who speak a lot to their children are genetically predisposed to have higher vocabularies themselves and they pass on this advantage to their children?
Nature and nurture - disentangling the two
Nature and nurture are hard to disentangle - it’s easy to mistake an environmental effect for a genetic effect and vice versa. Here are some of the ways that genes and environment can intersect, making it difficult to separate out the influence in each.
What is the gene- environment interaction?
The effects of genes may depend on the environment and how the individual responds to this environment.
Example: people who possess a gene that results in low production of an enzyme called monoamine oxidase (MAO) May be at increased risk of becoming violent criminals.
Whether this genetic risk factor is associated with violent behaviour depends on whether children were exposed to a history of maltreatment (such as physical abuse).
Is there a warrior gene?
MAOA is an enzyme that metabolises monoamines, such as serotonin norepinephrine and dopamine.
MAOA low -> biased development of neural systems and circuits -> hyperactive amygdala and underactive vmPFC -> increased negative emotional/impulse control -> increased likelihood and intensity of aggressive response to provocation
Example of nature vs. nurture with Niche Picking hypothesis.
Tendency of individuals with certain genetic predispositions to seek out and create environments that permit the expression of those predispositions.
Nice picking hypothesis of Scarr and McCartney (1983)
- genes affect an individuals preference for particular environments
- the environment then affects development of the individual
- generically similar people will tend to select similar environments, thus leading to similar IQ
- it is possible that genetic predisposition influences individuals to tend towards environments that accentuate that disposition, thus leading to increased heritability throughout their lifespan
The niche picking hypothesis supports the influence of genetics on IQ
Another example is that extroverts May deliberately engage with others like themselves
Gene expression in nature vs. nurture
Environmental influences actually turn genes on and off throughout our lives.
Gene C controls the colour of the fur in Himalayan rabbits. The gene is only active at temperatures in the range 15-25 celcius.
The rabbit reared at 20 degrees shows pigmentation in areas where the rabbit loses most heat. the rabbit at 30 degrees does not
Implications of predisposition with genes
Children with genes that predispose them to anxiety may never become anxious unless a highly situation (eg early death of a parent in early development) could trigger these genes to become active.
What is Lamarcks hypothesis?
Behavioural epigenetics provides a mechanism through which acquired behavioural and psychological characteristics might be inheritable, resurrecting the Lamarck hypothesis.
Lamarckism (or Lamarckian inheritance) is the hypothesis that an organism can pass on characteristics that it has acquired during its lifetime to its offspring. It is also known as the inheritance of squired characteristics.
Studying developmental finding - how do we track changes with cross sectional design.
Cross- sectional design:
A design in which researchers examine people who are of different ages at a single point in time - Snapshot approach.
Group 1, 2 and 3 are compared at the same time. Convenient: data can be gathered quickly.
Problem with cross- sectional design of developmental design: cohort effects
Effects due to the fact that groups that lived during one time period called cohorts, can differ from other cohorts.
Example of potential cohort confound:
- studying cognitive performance in young and ild adults using a computer task
- people of certain age range may have similar characteristics influenced by a variety of factors (e.g. exposure to a natural disaster, war, educational system, etc.)
What is the only way to guard against cohort effects when investigating the way people change over time?
A longitudinal design study.
Psychologists tract the development of the same group of people over time.
Advatanges:
- help provide causal information as each person serves as his or her own control
- help assess role of individual differences factors
Disadvantages:
- time consuming
- expensive
- problems with participant attrition
What are two things is developmental research to be aware of?
- Assuming that an observed correlation is due to causation (after this, therefore because of this).
- Development and experience have bidirectional influence in each other, e.g. parents influence their children’s behaviour, which in turn influences parents reactions
Physical development: prenatal and infant physical development
- the prenatal period of development begins with conception and ends at birth (ca. Nine months later)
- the fertilised egg, called a zygote, is made up of genetic material (46 chromosomes grouped into 23 pairs).
- a developing baby is called an embryo through the eighth week of gestation (pregnancy)
- after the eighth week of pregnancy and until birth occurs, a developing baby is called a fetus
What’re some obstacles to normal fetal development
Although most babies are born healthy and fully intact, feral development can be disrupted in four ways:
- Premature birth
- Low birth weight (defined as less than 2.5 kilograms for a full term baby)
- Exposure to hazardous environmental influences and
- Biological influences resulting from genetic disorders or errors in cell duplication during cell division
What’re teratogens?
Environmental factors that can affect prenatal development negatively. They range from drugs and alcohol to chicken pox and x-rays.
Feral alcohol spectrum disorder refers to a collection of disorders called by prenatal exposure to alcohol
Toddler and preadolescent physical development
Survival instincts: infant reflexes:
Infants are born with a large set of automatic motor behaviours - or reflexes-. Reflexes fulfil important survival needs. One is a sucking reflex, an automatic response to oral stimulation.
Movement milestones:
Includes sitting up, crawling, standing unsupported and walking.
Fine and gross motor skills develop in a predictable order
Motor skills emerge in sequence from the head to the feet and from the centre of the body to outward.
Sex differences in toddler and preadolescent physical development
- girls typically develop fine motor skills, such as drawing or stringing beads more quickly than boys
- boys typically develop gross motor skills, such as climbing or jumping, more quickly than girls
- this May also be influenced by the type of activity girls and boys practise more.
Around the age of 8-9, the brain grows to nearly the same size as an adult as different parts such as the frontal lobes develop. Hence, children’s cognitive capacity increases.
Adult physical development
- adults reach their peak levels of strength, agility, stamina, and vigour during their twenties.
- by the age of 30, each of these begins to decline. Older adults typically show declines in balance, coordination, and reaction time.
- fertility in males and females declines rapidly after age 35. Women may remain fertile until about age 50 when their Estrogen levels drop steeply and they undergo menopause, or the cessation of menstrual periods
- although men remain fertile for longer than women, sperm quality decreases.
Outline Piaget’s theory.
Piaget’s theory: how children construct their worlds - Swiss physcologjst Jean Piaget (1896-1980) was the first to present a comprehensive account of cognitive development.
Piaget observed that children do not think like adults, they are not miniature adults - children’s thinking is qualitatively different.
Piaget is a stage theorist - thinking reorganises at specific transition points.
Sensorimotor-birth to 2 years-no thought beyond immediate physical experiences
Preoperational-2-7years- able to think beyond the here and now, but egocentric and unable to perform mental transformations
Concrete operational-7-11 Years- able to perform mental transformations but only on concrete physical objects
Formal operational-11 years to adult- able to perform hypothetical and abstract reasoning
Sensorimotor stage of Piaget’s theory
Children’s main sources of knowledge, thinking and experience are their physical interactions with the world
-children integrate new information learned from experience into their existing understanding of the world in a process called assimilation. Eg. A child seeing a zebra for the first time and calling it a horse.
-they modify or create new schemes as a result of experience in a process called accomodation.
Eg. The first time the child sees a cow, he calls it a horse (it fits in with his current scheme). He then learns that this is a different animal entirely and develops a new schema
Infants in this state have no concept of object permanence. Understanding that objects continue to exist even when out of view
Preoperational stage of Piagets theory
Proposed that from 2 until about 7 years, children pass through a stage marked by an ability to construct mental representations of experience.
- children in this stage can use such symbols as language, drawing and objects as representations of ideas
- have object permanence
- are egocentric: cannot see the world through anyone’s eyes but their own
- children construct mental representations, but they cannot perform mental transformations - Piaget developed a series of conservation tasks to test this
What is Piaget’s conservation task?
Piaget filled two cups of water which were level, then poured one into a more narrow glass. Participants at the preoperational stage then suggested that the more narrow glass had more water
Concrete operational stage in Piaget’s theory of learning?
Between 7 and 11 years old, according to Piaget, children enter a stage characterised by the ability to perform mental operations, but only for actual physical events.
- can understand which actions can or cannot affect concrete objects
- can also perform organisational tasks (eg sorting coins, organise a battle field) but need for physical experience as an anchor for their mental representations
Formal operations stage: emerges in adolescence. Children Aquire the capacity to reason about abstract concepts. This is the most sophisticated type of thinking: hypothetical reasoning