Overview of the Day
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Transcript Overview of the Day
Overview of the Day
Developmental Psychology - Part 2
Adolescence & young adulthood
Middle age
Old age
Physical changes
Adolescence: between the beginning of sexual
maturity to independent adulthood
Secondary sex characteristics
Why are adolescents capable of having children
when marriage is so much later?
Why has onset of menarche occurring earlier in girls
now (about 12-13, when in the past it was 13-15),
even though marriage is much later?
more fat in diet
less physical activity
Adulthood
Physical capacity: heart, lung, energy expenditure, reaction
time, sensory keenness all peak by early adulthood (mid-twenties );
because women mature earlier, their physical capacities peak earlier
much of physical vigor is a function of regular exercise: use it or lose it (skiing
12 miles with PK who is mid 50s). people can still be extremely fit into their 60s
and beyond, if they exercise regularly
Menopause: secession of ability to bear children (onset
typically occurs in late 40s)
many women state that they feel better than they have in years
after menopause
grandmother hypothesis: care for their children’s offspring
Cognitive changes
Intelligence
general intelligence does not decline much with age
crystallized IQ (store of knowledge and reasoning strategies)
increases and fluid IQ (general problem solving, free of
content) decreases with age
Memory?
20s is peak for memory
but not all that bad when aging: recognition does not decline much
with age (recall does);
meaningful memory works well into old age (web of associations)
same as with physical: use it or lose it (stay intellectually active)
Senility (senile dementia) disturbance of higher
order mental functions associated with age
5-20% of people become senile into 80s and 90s
50% of caused by Alzheimer (destroys neurons in the brain causing
loss of memory, reasoning, and language impairment.
Causes (genetic), loss of neurotransmitter acetylcholine (also myelin
sheath); tangled neurons
What is the relationship between age and performance
at work?
no relation
At what developmental phase is a person’s age
least predictive of her abilities and
personality?
Adulthood
Social and moral
development
Kohlberg's theory of moral development
stages of moral reasoning
Erickson's theory of psycho-social
development
stages of social development
Social clock: Culturally preferred timing for
when one should leave home, marry, have
children, and retire
There is no rigid consensus on "social clock"
cultural prescriptions. They vary by culture
and subculture.
Marriage and children
9 out of 10 adults marry;
75 % of those who
divorce remarry (and are as happy as they were in 1st
marriages)
Marriage bonds are most likely to endure
when . . . ?
Couples maintain at least a 5 to 1 ratio of positive to negative
interactions with each other
When children grow up and leave home,
mothers . . .?
Report feeling happy
Chance encounters
Life course is not entirely predictable due
to chance encounters
Development: The bottom
line
Genes
Peers
Parents (neighborhoods, opportunities)
Education; jobs
Chance encounters
Summary
Development and maturation
Conception and gestation
Competent newborn
Cognitive development
Attachment
Physical changes
Social and moral development
Marriage and children
Chance encounters