Infancy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 65
About This Presentation
Title:

Infancy

Description:

... (e.g.- visual cliff) Still face experiment http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=apzXGEbZht0 Mirror neurons help infants experience others emotions: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:82
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 66
Provided by: Prefe118
Category:
Tags: infancy | youtube

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Infancy


1
Infancy
  • Chapter 4-6
  • Psyc311
  • Dr. Jen Wright

2
infant brain
3
one of the last organs to develop
4
difference between species
Species EQ Species EQ
Human 7.4 Cat 1.0
Dolphin 5.3 Horse 0.9
Chimpanzee 2.5 Sheep 0.8
Rhesus Monkey 2.1 Mouse 0.5
Elephant 1.9 Rat 0.4
Whale 1.8 Rabbit 0.4
Dog 1.2  Parrot 2.5
  • Humans do not have the largest brain but they
    have the largest EQ.
  • Encephalization Quotient (EQ)
  • Average brain mass/body weights for a species.
  • Average for species/average mammalian value.

EQ??IQ
5
brain development
  • Most brain development happens outside (instead
    of inside) the womb
  • Monkey newborn 70 adult size
  • Human newborn 25 adult size
  • Most growth occurs in first 3 yrs
  • 3 yrs old 80 adult size
  • 5 yrs old 90 adult size

6
developmental processes
  • Neurogenesis proliferation of neurons through
    cell division
  • 250,000 cells born every minute
  • Synaptognesis formation of connections
  • Each neuron forms 1000s of connections
  • Axons elongate towards specific targets
  • Dendritic trees increases in size and
    complexity
  • By 6 months 2 x more synaptic connections

7
developmental processes
8
developmental processes
  • Synaptic pruning elimination of excess synapses
  • Streamlines neural processing
  • Without synaptic pruning, children wouldn't be
    able to walk, talk, or even see properly.
  • Myelination insulating sheath
  • Happens at different rates into adolescence
  • Certain areas are myelinated first

9
patterns of brain growth
10
importance of experience
  • Plasticity brains ability to change w/
    experience
  • Experience-expectant plasticity (experiences
    present throughout evolution)
  • Economizes on material encoded in genes
  • Development will occur within a normal range of
    environments
  • Level of vulnerability in timing
  • Sensitive periods
  • Examples?
  • vision
  • language

11
announcements
  • Psychology Club Event
  • Volunteering in the Community
  • 9/29 (next Weds) 515pm, ECTR 116
  • Feedback for in-class debate
  • Group write-ups pick up after class.
  • Study session for Exam 01
  • 9/29 (next Weds) 700pm, ECTR 113
  • 35 MC/TF questions (2pts each)
  • 2 essay qs (20 pts 10 pts) I will give you
    potential qs in advance

12
production
comprehension
13
both languages
2nd language
native language
14
importance of experience
  • Experience-dependent plasticity (experiences of
    individual)
  • Brain sculpted by idiosyncratic experiences
  • Responsive to richness of environmental stimuli
  • Important in development of expertise
  • More brain resources dedicated to processing
  • E.g. musicians cortical representation of hands

15
effect of deprivation
16
effect of deprivation
17
(No Transcript)
18
importance of sleep
  • Regular and ample sleep correlates with normal
    brain maturation, learning, emotional regulation,
    and psychological adjustment in school and within
    the family.

19
importance of sleep
20
importance of sleep
  • REM sleep critical for neural development in
    brain, esp. for activity-dependent development
  • E.g. visual system
  • Facilitates learning/memory
  • Sleep deprivation linked with later problems
  • E.g. ADHD, learning disabilities
  • Babies most at risk of disruption
  • Premature infants in IC units

21
stress and brain development
  • Exposure to excessive stress hormones is bad for
    brain development.
  • Early symptoms of PTSD
  • The brain can become incapable of producing
    normal stress responses.
  • Hyper-vigilance (Ghosts in the Nursery)
  • Emotional flatness
  • Physical/emotional abuse and neglect can be
    equally damaging.

22
what is attachment?
23
attachment theory
  • Attachment refers to the close, emotional bond
    between an infant and his/her primary caregiver.
  • Psychoanalytic Theory (Freud)
  • Driven by oral needs during the first year
  • Emphasized early experiences on later outcomes
  • Behaviorist Perspective (Skinner)
  • Driven by the need for food
  • Learns to associate contact with mother with food
  • Mothers closeness continually reinforced

24
attachment theory
  • Ethology (Lorenz)
  • Rooted in Darwins Evolutionary Theory
  • Focused on the adaptive value of behavior
  • Bond necessary for survival
  • Imprinting

25
primary criticisms
  • Love (i.e., attachment) seen as secondary to
    instinctive or survival needs
  • Harlow believed that the need for love and
    affection was necessary for survival

26
announcments
  • Psyc Club Volunteering in the Community
  • Exam study session
  • Weds, 7-9pm, ECTR113
  • Friday Ch 4-6 Ask yourself Qs due
  • How do you want to spend Friday?
  • A) lecture
  • B) ask yourself qs and study guide!
  • Exam 01- Monday!

27
Harlows monkeys (1958)
  • Early work with monkeys
  • Cloth wire mother
  • Only one equipped with feeding apparatus
  • Monkeys randomly assigned
  • Observed for 5 months
  • Both groups preferred cloth mother

28
Infant monkey fed on cloth mother
24
.
Infant monkey fed on wire mother
.
.
.
.
.
18
.
Hours per day spent with cloth mother
.
Contact Time with Wire and Cloth Surrogate
Mothers
12
.
Mean hours per day
.
6
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Hours per day spent with wire mother
0
21-25
1-5
11-15
6-10
16-20
Age (in days)
29
Harlows monkeys (1958)
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vhsA5Sec6dAI
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vcaM4-f6ZZBEfeature
    related

30
attachment theory
  • John Bowlby
  • Observations of children in institutionalized
    care
  • Infant has built-in behaviors to keep parent
    close
  • Gives way to true affectionate bond
  • Serves 2 purposes
  • Secure base
  • Internal working model

31
attachment theory
  • Mary Ainsworth (1979)
  • Developed Strange Situation
  • Work revealed 4 types of attachment behavior
  • Securely Attached
  • Insecure Avoidant
  • Insecure Resistant
  • Insecure Disorganized
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vQTsewNrHUHU

32
internal working model
33
cultural variation
34
social learning
35
facial recognition
36
(No Transcript)
37
mirror neurons
  • Found in the frontal and parietal lobes
  • Fire when you
  • You engage in an activity (reaching out ones
    hand)
  • You observe someone else engaging in the same
    activity.
  • Fire more strongly when action has some purpose
    or content
  • reaching out ones hand for a cup.
  • MNs play a clear role in learning/imitation.
  • May also play a role in mind-reading
  • grasping intentions, goals, desires.

38
(No Transcript)
39
emotional communication
40
crying
  • Crying communication of emotion
  • Response to distress
  • Development of emotional self-regulation
  • Mastery of environment agency
  • Biofeedback loop
  • Soothing
  • Swaddling tight wrapping of baby in cloth
  • Touch
  • Sweet taste
  • Soft, rhythmic sounds
  • Vibration

41
crying disorders
  • Colic (1 in 10 infants birth 12 weeks)
  • Extended periods of intense crying
  • Cause unknown
  • Immature nervous system
  • Hyper-sensitivity
  • Digestive problems
  • Prolonged crying (beyond 12 weeks)
  • Exhibit developmental and behavioral disorders

42
crying disorders
  • Prolonged crying expose the brain to high levels
    of cortisol, adrenaline, and other damaging
    chemicals.
  • Damage to hippocampus
  • Reduced levels of vasopressin and serotonin
  • Reduced levels of emotional regulation
  • Impaired memory
  • Increased levels of aggression/violence/bullying
  • Increased levels of anxiety disorders

43
early emotional expression
  • Earliest emotion
  • global arousal states of attraction and
    withdrawal
  • set the stage for further development
  • develop into well-organized, sustained signals
  • Basic emotions
  • emotions that can be directly inferred from
    facial expressions.
  • happiness, interest
  • surprise, fear, anger
  • sadness, disgust

44
  • Basic emotions
  • Universal across all human cultures
  • Present in other advanced species
  • Include guilt, shame, embarrassment
  • AB
  • All of the above

45
emotional self-regulation
  • Strategies for adjusting emotional state to a
    comfortable (adaptive) level of intensity in
    order to accomplish goals
  • Infants withdrawal, distress, crying -- need
    soothing
  • 4 mos shift focus of attention
  • 1 year approach/retreat from stimulus
  • Parent response to distress is important
  • Sympathetic
  • child more easily soothed, more self-regulated
  • Non-responsive (wait to intervene)
  • child enters into rapid, intense distress
  • harder to soothe
  • doesnt develop self-regulation

46
emotional self-regulation
  • When an infants needs are met, they can focus on
    the world around them and explore.
  • Their brains take in and adapt to stimulation
    from the external world.
  • When they arent met, they become fixated on
    trying to get their needs met.
  • They stop exploring and shut out other
    stimulation from the external world.

47
emotions of others
  • Emotional contagion babies match the emotional
    expressions of caregiver
  • 7-10 mos infants perceive facial expressions as
    organized patterns, can match facial expression
    to emotion
  • 8-10 mos social referencing- relying on another
    persons emotional reaction to appraise situation
    (e.g.- visual cliff)
  • Still face experiment

http//www.youtube.com/watch?vapzXGEbZht0
48
  • Mirror neurons help infants experience others
    emotions
  • Yes, because they help them match emotional
    facial expressions
  • Yes, because they stimulate a matching internal
    experience
  • Yes, because they allow infants to empathize with
    others.
  • AB
  • No, because mns are only involved in imitation
    of physical behavior

49
social referencing
  • Example of how adults help child regulate emotion
  • Permits toddlers to compare their assessments of
    situations with others
  • Helps young children move beyond simply reacting
    to emotional messages
  • Visual cliff experiment

http//www.youtube.com/watch?veyxMq11xWzM
50
temperament
  • Constitutionally based individual differences in
  • Emotion
  • Motor function
  • Attentional reactivity
  • Self-regulation
  • Influences the way that children develop,
    display, and control emotions
  • Foundation for later personality

51
temperament styles
  • Types
  • Easy
  • Difficult
  • Slow to warm up
  • Differences in sociability
  • Differences in punishment/reward
  • Which child will be harder to reward/punish?
  • Easy child
  • Difficult child

52
temperament styles
  • What else affects the development of temperament?
  • Gender
  • Cultural differences
  • Goodness of fit (with parents/environment)

53
(No Transcript)
54
(No Transcript)
55
cognitive development
56
theory differences
  • Piaget stage theory
  • Child as blank slate (everything learned)
  • Focus on learning as a process within individuals
  • Core-knowledge theory
  • Child possesses innate knowledge (domains of
    thought)
  • Socio-cultural theory
  • Focus on learning as a social process between
    individuals

57
Piagets theory
  • Constructivist approach children actively
    construct knowledge for themselves in response to
    their experiences.
  • Child as scientist
  • Generate hypotheses
  • Perform experiments
  • Draw conclusions
  • Children learn many things on their own
  • without the help of instruction from adults.
  • Children are intrinsically motivated to learn.
  • Discontinuous (qualitative) change
  • different ages think differently.

58
conservation of quantity (1)
59
conservation of quantity (2)
60
Information processing
  • Computational approach cognitive development as
    a passive maturation process that occurs over
    time.
  • Child as a computational system
  • Children undergo continuous (quantitative)
    cognitive change
  • Development through increasingly sophisticated
    hardware and software
  • Faster and more efficient processing, larger
    memory bank, better learning algorithms
  • More content knowledge (learned facts) to draw
    upon

61
Core-knowledge theories
  • Child as well-adapted product of evolution
  • Emphasis on sophistication of childrens thinking
    in areas that have had evolutionary importance.
  • Eg. environment navigation, face recognition,
    language
  • Naïve physics, psychology, biology
  • Some advanced capacities already present (innate)
  • Move from general to domain specific
    specialized learning mechanisms

62
Naïve physics
  • Infants have a surprisingly sophisticated
    understanding of how the physical world works.

63
(No Transcript)
64
understanding intentions
  • They also have a pretty sophisticated
    understanding of how the psychological world
    works
  • e.g., they understand that there are goals and
    intentions and that only certain creatures can
    have them.

65
primitive morality
?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com