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Developing Through the Life Span

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Title: Developing Through the Life Span


1
Developing Through the Life Span
2
Enduring Issues
  • Diversity Universality
  • Stability Change
  • Nature Nurture

3
Research Methodologies
  • Cross-sectional
  • Examining groups of subjects who are of different
    ages
  • Longitudinal
  • Examining the same group of subjects two or more
    times as they age

4
Research Methodologies
  • Sequential Design

2000
1998
5
The Newborn
  • Reflexes
  • Rooting reflex
  • Sucking reflex
  • Swallowing reflex
  • Grasping reflex
  • Stepping reflex
  • Are responsive to human faces, voices, and touch

6
Newborn Temperament
  • Babies are born with individual differences in
    personality called temperament differences
  • Types
  • Easy
  • Difficult
  • Slow-to-warm-up

7
Newborn Temperament
  • Babies are born with individual differences in
    personality called temperament differences
  • Types
  • Easy
  • Spirited
  • Slow-to-warm-up
  • Shy

8
Developmental Principles
  • Cephalocaudal
  • Proximodistal

9
Give your best estimate of the age at which about
50 of children begin to
  1. Laugh
  2. Pedal a tricycle
  3. Sit without support
  4. Feel ashamed
  5. Walk unassisted
  6. Stand on one foot for 10 seconds

10
  1. Recognize and smile at mother/father
  2. Kick ball forward
  3. Think about things that cannot be seen
  4. Make two-word utterances

11
Brain Development
  • Neurons present at birth
  • Neural networks form after birth
  • Stimulation is key
  • Preschool-age
  • Growth most rapid in frontal lobes
  • Last areas to develop include those linked to
    thinking, memory, and language

12
  • Maturation
  • The biological growth processes that enable
    orderly changes in behavior
  • Sets the basic course of development
  • Experience adjusts course
  • Critical period

13
Physical Development
14
Physical Development in Adolescence
  • Growth spurt occurs at different ages for each
    sex
  • Sexual development
  • Females
  • Menarche
  • Males
  • Spermarche

15
Physical Development in Adulthood
  • Rate increases with time
  • Climacteric
  • Women ? menopause
  • Men ? changes in prostate
  • Use it or lose it

16
Physical Development in Adulthood
  • Primary aging
  • Secondary aging

17
Cognitive Development
  • Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget
  • Children undergo qualitative changes in thinking
    as they grow older
  • Stage theory
  • Invariant
  • universal

18
Cognitive Development Piaget
  • Sensorimotor stage
  • Move from reflexive to voluntary, goal-directed
    actions
  • Object permanence
  • Two major accomplishments
  • Goal-directed actions
  • Mental representation

19
Cognitive Development Piaget
  • Preoperational Stage
  • Child becomes able to use mental representations
    and language to describe, remember, and reason
    about the world
  • Egocentrism
  • Inability to see things from another persons
    point of view
  • Animism

20
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21
Cognitive Development Piaget
  • Preoperational Stage (cont)
  • Conservation
  • knowledge that certain physical attributes of an
    object remain unchanged even though the outward
    appearance of the object is altered

22
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23
Cognitive Development Piaget
  • Preoperational Stage (cont)
  • Centered
  • Irreversibility

24
Cognitive Development Piaget
  • Concrete Operational Stage
  • A child can attend to more than one thing at a
    time and understand someone elses point of view.
    (decentration)
  • Thinking is limited to concrete matters.
  • A child can understand conservation.

25
Cognitive Development Piaget
  • Formal Operational Stage
  • Acquire the ability to think abstractly
  • Can formulate hypotheses
  • Can think in terms of cause-and-effect
  • Develop general rules, principles

26
  • Formal Operational Stage
  • Adolescent egocentrism
  • Imaginary audience
  • Personal fable

27
Criticisms of Piaget
  • Underestimated abilities
  • Not enough focus on social influences
  • Still contributed!!

28
Cognitive Changes
  • An adult's thinking is more flexible and
    practical than an adolescent's
  • Adults realize that there may be several right
    solutions or none at all
  • Some skills increase through the sixties
  • Vocabulary, verbal memory
  • Others fall off slightly after age 40
  • Reasoning, spatial memory

29
Cognitive Changes
  • Fluid intelligence ?
  • reasoning, memory, information processing
  • Crystallized intelligence or ?
  • information, skills, problem-solving strategies

30
  • A mans wife is ill with a rare kind of cancer.
    There is a drug that may save her, but it is very
    expensive. The pharmacist who discovered this
    medicine will sell it for 2,000, but the man has
    only 1,000. He asks the pharmacist to let him
    pay part of the cost now and the rest later, but
    the pharmacist refuses. Being desperate, the man
    steals the drug. Should he have done so? Why or
    why not?

31
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32
  • preconventional level
  • judge morality largely in terms of consequences
  • conventional level
  • whether behavior supports and preserves the laws
    and rules of society
  • postconventional level
  • judge morality in terms of abstract principles
    and values
  • a single rule system is only one of many
    possibilities
  • some laws are inconsistent with the rights on
    individuals

33
Criticisms of Kohlbergs Theory
  • Gilligan ? studied only males
  • Feminine morality emphasizes an ethic of care
  • Kohlbergs system focuses on rights and justice
    male ideals
  • May be culturally biased

34
Attachment
  • Strong emotional bond to a specific person
  • Other species ?imprinting
  • Humans ? attachment
  • Seen in desire to obtain and maintain contact

35
Theories of Attachment
  • Freud
  • Psychoanalytic/secondary drive theory
  • Bowlby
  • Ethological theory
  • Harry Harlow
  • Research with rhesus monkeys

36
Individual Differences in Attachment
  • Secure
  • Insecure
  • May have long term consequences

37
Eriksons Psychosocial Theory
38
Attachment
  • Fathers
  • Daycare
  • Parenting

39
Parenting Styles Baumrind
  • Authoritarian
  • Rigid control insist on unquestioning obedience
  • Permissive
  • Very supportive few if any limits
  • Authoritative
  • Firm structure and guidance not overly
    controlling engage in give-and-take
  • Neglectful
  • Little control no limits neglectful and
    inattentive little emotional support

40
Parenting Temperament
  • Easy
  • Spirited
  • Slow-to-warm-up

41
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42
Return to Attachment
  • Adolescence
  • Storm and strife?
  • Identity
  • Identity diffusion
  • Identity foreclosure
  • Moratorium
  • Identity achievement

43
Parental Influences in Adolescence
  • Better relationships with parents ? better
    relationships with peers
  • Closeness with parents ? healthy, happy, do well
    in school
  • Teens in trouble ? tense relationships with
    parents
  • Correlation ? causation!

44
Peer Influences in Adolescence
  • Preschoolers will eat food peers eat even if
    refused prior
  • Teens talk, dress, and act more like peers than
    parents

45
Choose which of the following best describes your
relationship with your mother when you were a
child growing up. Do the same for your father.
  1. Warm/Responsive S/he was generally warm and
    responsive s/he was good at knowing when to be
    supportive and when to let me operate on my own
    our relationship was almost always comfortable,
    and I have no major reservations or complaints
    about it.
  2. Cold/Rejecting S/he was fairly cold and distant,
    or rejecting, not very responsive I wasnt
    her/his highest priority, her/his concerns were
    often elsewhere its possible that s/he would
    just as soon not have had me.
  3. Ambivalence/Inconsistent S/he was noticeably
    inconsistent in her/his reactions to me,
    sometimes warm and sometimes not s/he had
    her/his own agendas which sometimes got in the
    way of her/his receptiveness and responsiveness
    to my needs s/he definitely loved me but didnt
    always show it in the best way.

46
Which of the following best describes your
current feelings? (Read the descriptions below
and choose the one that best summarizes your
feelings an behavior in romantic love
relationships.)
  1. Secure I find it relatively easy to get close to
    others and am comfortable depending on them. I
    dont often worry about being abandoned or about
    someone getting too close to me.
  2. Avoidant I am somewhat uncomfortable being close
    to others I find it difficult to trust them
    completely, difficult to allow myself to depend
    on them. I am nervous when anyone gets too
    close, and often, love partners want me to be
    more intimate than I feel comfortable being.
  3. Anxious/Ambivalent I find that others are
    reluctant to get as close as I would like. I
    often worry that my partner doesnt really love
    me or wont want to stay with me. I want to get
    very close to my partner, and this sometimes
    scares people away.

47
Attachment in Adulthood
Model of Self
Positive
Negative
Secure Secure attachment history Preoccupied Resistant attachment history
Dismissing Avoidant attachment history Fearful/Unresolved/Disorganized Disorganized/ disoriented attachment history
Positive
Model of Other
Negative
48
Passing thoughts
  • Life is not predictable
  • Love and work dominate adulthood
  • Most people retain a sense of well-being
  • Huge range of reactions to death

49
Griefletting go of myths
  • Immediately expressed strong grief ? earlier
    recovery
  • Grief therapy/self-help groups lt time social
    support
  • Terminally ill do not go through stages of grief

50
Williams Best (2004)
  • Males
  • Active, adventurous, aggressive, arrogant,
    autocratic, bossy, coarse, conceited,
    enterprising, hardheaded, loud, obnoxious,
    opinionated, opportunistic, pleasure-seeking,
    precise, quick, reckless, show-off, and tough
  • Females
  • Affected, affectionate, appreciative, cautious,
    changeable, charming, dependent, emotional,
    fearful, forgiving, modest, nervous, patient,
    pleasant, prudish, sensitive, sentimental,
    softhearted, timid, and warm

51
Gender Differences
  • Men ? more aggressive, dominant, forceful,
    independent
  • Physical vs. relational aggression
  • More likely to hold positions of power/leadership
  • Women ? social connections
  • Differences in interactional styles

52
  • Gender Roles
  • The behaviors a culture expects of its men and
    women
  • Gender Identity
  • Ones sense of being male or female

53
How do we learn to be male/female?
  • Social Learning Theory
  • Gender typing
  • Taking on a traditional masculine or feminine role

54
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55
Sexual Orientation
  • An enduring sexual attraction toward members of
    either our own sex (homosexual orientation) or
    the other sex (heterosexual orientation)

56
  • about 3-4 of men and 1-2 of women are
    exclusively homosexual, much smaller number (lt
    1) are bisexual
  • 1973 change in DSM (APA)
  • 1993 change from World Health Organization
  • 1995/2001 change in Japans/Chinas psychiatric
    associations

57
Biology and Sexual Orientation
  • Same-Sex Attraction in Other Species
  • Gay-Straight Brain Differences
  • Hypothalamus emotions and sexual arousal
  • Genetic Influences
  • Gay men have more homosexual relatives on their
    mothers side than on their fathers
  • Identical twins more likely than fraternal
  • Fruit flies

58
Prenatal Influences
  • Exposure to hormones during critical period
    prenatally
  • Maternal immune system
  • More older brothers increased likelihood

59
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