Title: PSYCHOLOGY 100 January 2930, 2003 Lifespan Development Chapter 11 continued
1PSYCHOLOGY 100January 29/30, 2003Lifespan
DevelopmentChapter 11 (continued)
2What Happens as a Person Ages?
- Positive Change?
- Negative Change?
3When is a Person Old(er)?
4Continuity vs Stages
- Figure 11.7
- Stage theories of development. Some theories view
development as a relatively continuous process,
albeit not as smooth and perfectly linear as
depicted on the left. In contrast, stage theories
assume that development is marked by major
discontinuities (as shown on the right) that
bring fundamental, qualitative changes in
capabilities or characteristic behavior.
5Adolescence
Change
- Developmental period ages 12 to 18
- Many biological, perceptual, cognitive, social,
and personality traits change from childlike to
adultlike - Puberty
- Developmental period between the ages of 9 and 17
when the individual experiences significant
biological changes that result in developing
secondary sex characteristics and reaching sexual
maturity
6Eriksons Ages of Human Development
- Young Adulthood
- Young adults come to terms with the importance of
companionship and connection - Shall I share my life with another person or
live alone? - The central conflict of early adulthood is that
of intimacy versus isolation. - But consider an example framed in terms of
continuity Teen suicide in aboriginals
(Chandler) - http//www.cheos.ubc.ca/Urban/healthChandler.html
7Young Adulthood
- The beginning of young adulthood is marked by
commitments in the areas of career, relationships
and lifestyle. - Knowledge gathering
- Expanding social networks/roles
- The quality of the period known as middle age is
influenced in part by the outcome of these early
adult decisions.
Change
8Eriksons Ages of Human Development
- Middle Age
- In the middle of adulthood one wants to feel that
they have contributed to society in some
meaningful way - Will I add anything of real value to the world
as a worker and a parent? - The conflict of middle adulthood is the desire to
achieve generativity versus stagnation.
9Middle Adulthood
Change
- The Midlife Transition
- The midlife crisis is a dramatic expression for
the reassessment of personal goals that many
people experience. - A more low-key and accurate term is midlife
transition. - Some abandon unrealistic goals set in youth and
set new goals that fit with their current lives. - Others try to fulfill some of those early life
dreams, or set new ones.
10Eriksons Ages of Human Development
- Old Age
- The reality that time is growing short forces
people to face a final and profound question - Have I lived a full and meaningful life, or have
I squandered my time? - As older adults we struggle to determine whether
we have arrived at a stage of ego integrity
versus despair.
11Old Adulthood
Change
- Despite the stereotypes we hold, old age is not a
uniform experience for humans - Some deteriorate rapidly physically and/or
intellectually - Shrinking social networks/roles (isolation)
- Others remain active and alert into their 80s and
later - Knowledge giving
- In general, the elderly in our society have been
experiencing improved health, activity and
intellect.
within between
heterogeneity
12Eriksons Stages
13Demographics Booms Echoes
- http//www.statcan.ca/english/Pgdb/demo31b.htm
14The Aging Population
- Prevalence How many in the total population
affected by a condition at a given time - Incidence How many new cases in a given time
- Longevity
- Health
- Education/Literacy
- Career
- Wealth
- Happiness (Quality of Life)
15The Shape of the Population
2016
1966
2041
1996
MalesltFemales
16Longevity
17Lifespan Perspective Defining Age
- Chronological Age
- Legal (retirement/pension)
- Experiences (world events)
- Genetic clocks
- Generational Cohort
- Peer Comparisons
- Self-perception
- Available Time
- Physical Status
- Growth vs Decline
- Activity Profile (Cognitive)
- Quantity/Quality
- Participation (Social)
- In(ter)dependence?
18Healthy (Successful) Aging
- Maturity
- Growth Completed
- Strength/Skill
- Experience/Expertise
- Knowledge
- Wisdom
- Independence
- Wealth
- Contribution to Others
- Leadership
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22Negative Aspects Ageist Stereotypes?
23Research Questions
- What changes with age?
- Positive and/or negative change?
- Why does it change with age? (Is it really
aging?) - Causes (genetic, environmental)
- Predisposing conditions (genetic, environmental)
- What could counteract change?
- Early intervention to prevent (e.g., diet,
education, lifestyle) - Cure (e.g., drugs, surgery)
- Assistive technology (e.g., glasses, walker)
- Rehab to cope/compensate (e.g., retraining,
counselling) - Fountain of Youth
- Longevity Preservation and/or Regeneration of
Function
24Research Designs
- Cross-sectional
- (between subjects comparisons)
- Simulations?
- Longitudinal
- (within subjects process over time)
- Retrospective
- Prospective
- Intervention
- Hybrid
25- Figure 11.4
- Longitudinal versus cross-sectional research. In
a longitudinal study of development between ages
6 and 10, the same children would be observed at
6, again at 8, and again at 10. In a
cross-sectional study of the same age span, a
group of 6-year-olds, a group of 8-year-olds, and
a group of 10-year-olds would be compared
simultaneously. Note that data collection could
be completed immediately in the cross-sectional
study, whereas the longitudinal study would
require four years to complete.
26- Table 10.5 (Kalat, Introduction to Psychology)
- Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Studies
27Sources of Bias
- Selective attrition
- differential survival
- increased probability of some kinds of subjects
dropping out. - Cohort effects
- bias created because groups of contemporaries all
have the same experience, knowledge or behaviors.
28Hybrid DesignVictoria Longitudinal
Study(http//web.uvic.ca/psyc/VLS/index-projects.
html)
29Research Approaches
- Experimental
- Group
- Correlational
- Case Study
- Observation
- Interviews/Narratives
- Population Survey
- Stats Canada
30Some Answers
31Aging Mind and Brain
- Same Performance
- More widespread activation brain reorganization
- Deterioration or Compensation?
- http//www.rotman-baycrest.on.ca/content/people/pr
ofiles/grady.html
32Predicament Enchancement Models of
Communication Aging
- Ageist Stereotypes fuel communicative
incompetence. - Dependent behaviours are reinforced and
independent behaviours are ignored by nurses in
residents of care facilities (Margaret Baltes). - Ryan EB, Giles H, Bartolucci G, Henwood K.
Psycholinguistic and social psychological
components of communication by and with the
elderly. Language and Communication 198661-24. - Ryan EB, Meredith SD, Maclean MJ, Orange JB.
Changing the way we talk with elders Promoting
health using the Communication Enhancement Model.
International Journal of Aging and Human
Development 19954189-107.
33Key Finding
Resilience
- Early experiences influence latter life
- http//www.earlylearning.ubc.ca/research.htm
- Example from aging research Nuns Study
- Those who wrote more complex language did not
show symptoms of dementia in Alzheimers disease - Snowdon, D.A., Kemper, S., J.A. Greiner, L.H.,
Wekstein, D.R., Markesbery, W.R. (1996).
Cognitive ability in early life and cognitive
function and Alzheimer's disease in late life
Findings from the Nun Study. J American Medical
Association, 275, 528-532. -
"Use it or lose it."
34Key Finding
Support
- Age differences in memory are diminished when
contextual support is available. - Free recall What did you learn last week?
- gt
- Cued recall Last week you learned about which
two experimental designs? - gt
- Recognition recall Last week did you learn
about cross-sectional and longitudinal designs? -
35Key Finding
Slowing
- Knowledge is enhance/preserved
- Processing is slowed
- Perception
- Cognition
- Performance varies with time/timing of task
components
36Key Finding Sensory Cognitive Aging Linked
- Sensory and cognitive processing both decline
with age Coincidence or not? - Hypotheses
- Deprivation
- Information Degradation
- Cognitive Load on Perception
- Common Cause
- Lindenberger U, Baltes PB. Sensory functioning
and intelligence in old age A strong connection.
Psych Aging 19949339-55.
37Older Listeners Models Hypotheses
Cognition
Perception
- Modular vs Integrated Systems
- Schneider BA, Pichora-Fuller MK. Implications of
perceptual deterioration for cognitive aging
research. In Craik FIM, Salthouse TA, eds, The
Handbook of Aging and Cognition, 2nd ed. Mahwah,
NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2000 3 155-219.
38UTM Research Equating for Perceptual Difficulty
during Cognitive Processing to Test the
Information Degradation Hypothesishttp//www.erin
.utoronto.ca/w3cihrsc/Cihr/index.htm
- Would old do as well as young if cognitive
measures were tested under enhanced perceptual
conditions? - Would young do as poorly as old if cognitive
measures were tested under degraded perceptual
conditions? - Is it really aging or just hearing loss?
39Speech Perception in Noise TestPichora-Fuller
MK, Schneider BA, Daneman M. How young and old
adults listen to and remember speech in noise. J
Acoust Soc Am 1995 97593-608.
- 8 lists of 50 sentences
- Half low-context
- John did not talk about the feast.
- Half high-context
- The wedding banquet was a feast.
- Repeat last word of sentence
- Vary SN
- Conversation at 65 dB SPL
- Noise in home at 50 dB SPL
- 15 dB SN in quiet living room
- - 2 dB SN in subway/aircraft
40Effect of Simulated Auditory Aging on Working
Memory SpanBrown S, Pichora-Fuller MK. Temporal
jitter mimics the effects of aging on word
identification and word recall in noise. Canadian
Acoustics 200028126-128.
41Noise and Discourse ComprehensionSchneider BA,
Daneman M, Murphy D, Kwong See S. Listening to
discourse in distracting settings The effects of
aging. Psych Aging 200015110-125.
42Final Comment
- Should we think about older adults like younger
adults performing under stressful conditions?