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Psychology 185

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Twin-study design compares the correlations for identical (monozygotic) twins ... Identical twins (monozygotic) share 100% of the same genetic material. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychology 185


1
Psychology 185
  • Applied Developmental Psychology

2
Topic 1.
  • Introduction

3
Applied Developmental Psychology
  • The field of applied developmental psychology
    (ADP) is defined as that aspect of psychology
    which bears upon enhancing developmental
    processes and preventing developmental handicaps.
    As a science-based field of psychology, ADP
    involves the systematic synthesis of research and
    applications to describe, explain, and promote
    optimal developmental outcomes in individuals and
    families as they develop along the life cycle.

4
Developmental Psychology
  • Basic developmental psychology
  • Normative physical development
  • Motor skills and physical skeletal structures
  • Normative cognitive development
  • Perception, memory, thinking
  • Normative social development
  • Emotion, attachment, morality, gender role

5
Developmental Psychology
  • Applied developmental psychology
  • Educational psychology/school psychology
  • Parenting/Family psychology
  • Psychological assessment
  • Developmental psychopathology/clinical child
    psychology
  • Pediatric psychology
  • Developmental forensic psychology (child
    psychology and law)
  • Community psychology

6
Human Development and Other Disciplines
Applied Developmental Psychology
Sociology
Anthropology
Biology
Medicine
Public Health
  • Education

Social Services
Industry Commerce
Politics
7
Sociology
  • Societal trends
  • Crime rate
  • Mass media
  • Communication (internet)

8
Anthropology
  • Cultural practices, beliefs, and rituals

9
Biology
  • Organic systems
  • Animal models
  • Genetics
  • Downs Syndrome
  • Autism
  • Behavioral Genetics

10
Behavioral Genetics
  • An area of biology concerned with how variation
    in behavior and development results from the
    combination of genetic and environmental factors.
  • All behavioral traits are heritable to some
    extent.
  • They are inherited through many genes
    (multifactoral) and also affected by the
    environment.

11
Behavioral Genetics
  • Twin-study design compares the correlations for
    identical (monozygotic) twins with those for
    fraternal (dizygotic) twins.
  • Identical twins (monozygotic) share 100 of the
    same genetic material.
  • Fraternal twins (dizygotic) share 50 of the same
    genetic material.
  • These studies help tease out differences in
    genetics and environment in behavior.

12
Behavioral Genetics
  • Adoption studies
  • look at adopted children in comparison to their
    biological parents and siblings and their
    adoptive ones.
  • Genetic influences are inferred when children
    resemble their biological relatives more than
    their adoptive ones.
  • Adoptive twin studies combine adoption studies
    and twin studies by comparing identical twins who
    grew up together with those separated at birth
    and reared apart.

13
Genes and Environment
14
Genes and Environment
15
Genes and Environment
16
Medicine
  • Treatment of physical illness via surgical,
    medicinal, and other invasive or noninvasive
    means
  • Treatment (e.g., cancer)
  • Medicine (e.g., thalidomide)

17
Thalidomide Children
18
Thalidomide Children
19
Public Health
  • Health policies
  • Sex education
  • Obesity and physical education
  • Infant mortality
  • Drug abuse
  • Alcohol
  • Smoking
  • Prenatal and postnatal screening

20
Infant Mortality
21
Illegal Drugs
  • Mothers who use cocaine, heroin, or methadone
    during pregnancy may have babies who are born
    drug-addicted.
  • Babies who are prenatally exposed to cocaine may
    have genital, urinary tract, kidney, and heart
    deformities, as well as brain seizures.
  • Fathers may contribute to these negative effects
    as cocaine may attach itself to sperm and cause
    birth defects.

22
Tobacco
  • Effects include low birth weight and increased
    chances of prematurity, miscarriage, and infant
    death.
  • Nicotine causes the placenta to grow abnormally
    the transfer of nutrients is reduced, and the
    fetus gains weight poorly.
  • Raises concentrations of carbon monoxide in
    bloodstreams of both mother and fetus
  • Stopping smoking can help the baby, even in the
    third trimester.
  • Passive smoking is related to low-birth-weight,
    infant death, and possible long-term impairments
    in attention and learning.

23
Alcohol
  • Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
  • Defects occur when women consume a lot of alcohol
    during pregnancy mental retardation, slow
    physical growth, and facial abnormalities.
  • Fetal alcohol effects (FAE)
  • Condition of children who display some, but not
    all, of the defects of FAS. Usually the mother
    drank less.
  • FAS babies fail to catch up later in physical
    size.
  • Mental impairment is permanent.
  • Alcohol requires large quantities of oxygen to
    metabolize, which is drawn away from the
    developing embryo or fetus.

24
Radiation
  • Radiation exposure can cause miscarriage, slow
    physical growth, an underdeveloped brain, and
    malformations of the skeleton and eyes.
  • Low-level radiation can increase the risk of
    childhood cancer.

25
Environmental Pollution
  • Mercury
  • Mental retardation, abnormal speech, difficulty
    in chewing and swallowing, and uncoordinated
    movements
  • Lead
  • Prematurity, low birth weight, brain damage, and
    a wide variety of physical defects
  • Polychlorinated-biphenyls (PCBs)
  • Lower than average birth weight, smaller heads
    (possible brain damage) and less interest in
    surroundings
  • Memory and learning difficulties later in
    development

26
Infectious Disease
  • Rubella (three-day or German measles)
  • Many abnormalities during the embryonic period
  • Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
  • 20 to 30 of women pass the virus to the
    developing organism.
  • Herpes viruses
  • Developing organism is especially sensitive.
  • Toxoplasmosis
  • Parasitic disease caused by eating undercooked or
    raw meat or by contact with the feces of infected
    cats
  • During the first trimester, it leads to eye and
    brain damage.

27
Nutrition
  • Malnourished babies who die reveal fewer brain
    cells, a lower brain weight, and abnormal brain
    organization.
  • Prenatal malnutrition can damage the immune
    system and the structure of the pancreas, liver,
    and blood vessels.
  • Successful intervention after birth must not only
    provide nutrients, but must also deal with
    mother-baby interactions.

28
Prenatal and Postnatal Health Care
  • Regular prenatal checkups help ensure the health
    of the mother and fetus

29
Prenatal Screening
  • Amniocentesis (21 weeks)
  • Chorionic villus sampling (9-11 weeks)
  • Ultrasound (anytime)
  • Maternal blood analysis (anytime)
  • Genetic counseling (before conception)

30
Education
  • Public education
  • Reading, writing, arithematics, science, sports,
    and morality
  • Special education
  • Gifted
  • Disabled

31
Social services
  • Child welfare
  • Child protection

32
Industry and Commerce
  • Child oriented manufacturing
  • Entertainment
  • Advertisement

33
Politics
  • Policy making
  • Law making
  • Electioneering

34
Human Development and Other Disciplines
Applied Developmental Psychology
Sociology
Anthropology
Biology
Medicine
Public Health
  • Education

Social Services
Industry Commerce
Politics
35
Why do we need applied developmental psychology?
  • Family
  • Education
  • Healthcare
  • Social welfare
  • Law
  • Industry
  • Politics

36
Bronfenbrenners Ecological Model
  • Microsystem
  • Innermost level of the environment and includes
    bi-directional influences in the person's
    immediate environment
  • Mesosystem
  • Connections among microsystems that foster
    development
  • Exosystem
  • Contexts not directly linked to children that
    affect their microsystem and mesosystem
    experiences
  • Macrosystem
  • Outermost layer that includes a culture's laws,
    values, and customs

37
(No Transcript)
38
Examples of Applied Developmental Psychology
Topics
  • Is daycare helpful or harmful to child
    development?
  • What is the impact of media violence on children?
  • Should we use children as witnesses in the court?
  • At which age can children be allowed to vote?
  • Is it possible to educate children in the womb?
  • How to best parent children?
  • Can autism be cured?

39
Significance of Applied Developmental Research
  • Affecting directly
  • Practice
  • PKU (Phenylketonuria)
  • Circumcision
  • Policy
  • Competence examination
  • Police line-up
  • Child witness interview clinics
  • Attitude
  • Adoption by gay parents

40
Group Task
  • Identify five issues you think that applied
    developmental psychologists should study?
  • Search the web and Psychinfo to investigate
    whether any studies have been done on the issues
  • Choose a presenter to present the five issues and
    provide rationales for each issue (i.e., why do
    we need to study a particular issue)
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