Transcript Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Developing through the lifespan
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Zygote
The fertilized egg; in enters a two-week
period of rapid cell division and develops into
an embryo.
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Embryo
The developing human organism from about
two weeks after fertilization through the
second month.
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Fetus
The developing human organism from nine
weeks after conception to birth
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Teratogens
Agents, such as chemical and virus, they can
reach the embryo or fetus during prenatal
development cause harm.
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Prenatal development
Zygote
Embryo
Fetus
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Fetal alcohol syndrome
Physical and cognitive abnormalities in
children caused by a pregnant woman’s
heavy drinking.
In severe cases, symptoms include
noticeable facial misproportions.
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Rooting reflex
A baby’s tendency, when touched on the
cheek, to turn toward touch, open the mouth,
and search for the nipple.
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Habituation
Decreasing responsiveness with repeated
stimulation. As intense gains familiarity with
his exposure to a visual stimulus, their
interest wanes and they look away sooner.
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Maturation
Biological growth process that enable orderly
changes in behavior, relatively uninfluenced
by experience.
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Schema
A concept or framework that organizes and
interprets information.
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Assimilation
Interpreting one’s new experience in terms of
one existing schemas.
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Accommodation
Adapting one’s current understandings
[schema] to incorporate new information.
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Cognition
All the mental light to that is associated with
thinking, knowing, remembering, and
communicating.
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Sensorimotor stage
In Piaget’s theory, the stage during which
infants know the world mostly in terms of their
sensory impressions and motor activities.
Birth to about two years of age
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Object permanence
The awareness that things continue to exist
even when not perceived.
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Preoperational stage
In Piaget’s theory, the stage during which a
child learns to use language but does not yet
comprehend the mental operations of
concrete logic.
From about two years of age to six or seven
years of age.
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Conservation
The principle that properties such as mass,
volume, and number remain the same
despite changes in forms of objects.
Piaget believed this to be part of the concrete
operational reasoning.
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Theory of mind
Peoples ideas about their own and others’
mental states – about their feelings,
perceptions, and thoughts and the behavior
these might predict.
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Autism
A disorder that appears in childhood and is
more quite efficient communication, social
interaction, and understanding of other states
of mind.
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Concrete operational stage
In Piaget’s theory, the stage of cognitive
development during which children gain the
mental operations that enable them to think
logically about concrete events.
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Formal operational stage
In Piaget’s theory, the stage of cognitive
development during which people begin to
think logically about abstract concepts.
Normally beginning about age 12
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Stranger anxiety
The fear of strangers that infants calmly
display, beginning by about eight months of
age.
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Attachment
An emotional tie with another person; shown
in young children by their seeking closeness
to the caregiver and showing distress on
separation.
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Critical period
An optimal period shortly after birth when an
organism’s exposure to certain stimuli or
experiences produces proper development.
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Imprinting
The process by which certain animals form
attachments during a critical period very early
in life.
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Basic trust
According to Erik Erikson, a sense that the
world is predictable and trustworthy; said to
be formed during infancy by appropriate
experiences with responsive caregivers.
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Self-concept
A sense of one’s identity and personal worth.
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Adolescents
The transition period from childhood to
adulthood extending from puberty to
independence.
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Primary sex characteristics
The body structures (ovaries, testes, and
external genitalia) that makes sexual
reproduction possible.
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Secondary Sex Characteristics
Nonreproductive sexual characteristics, such
as female breasts and hips, male voice
quality, and body hair.
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Menarche
First menstrual period
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Identity
One’s sense of self; according to Erikson, the
adolescent task is to solidify a sense of self
by testing and integrating various roles.
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Intimacy
In Erikson’s theory, the ability to form loving
relationships; a primary development task in
late adolescence and early adulthood.
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Menopause
The time of natural cessation of
menstruation; also refers the biological
change a woman experiences as her ability
to reproduce declines.
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Alzheimer’s disease
A progressive and irreversible brain disorder
characterized by gradual deterioration of
memory, reasoning, language, and, finally,
the physical functioning.
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Cross-sectional study
A study in which people of different ages are
compared with one another.
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Longitudinal study
Research in which the same people are
restudy then retested over a long period.
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Crystallized intelligence
One’s accumulated knowledge and verbal
skills; tends to increase with age.
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Fluid intelligence
One’s ability to reason speedily and
abstractly; tends to decrease during late
adulthood.
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Love
Intimacy, attachment, commitment – lulled by
whatever name – is central to healthy and
happy adulthood.
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