Unit 9, Developmental Psychology
Updated for 2011; goes with Ch. 4 in 2007 book)
The Developing Person
Developmental psychologist: studies physical, social and cognition change throughout the life span
Areas of research:
a. nature/nurture
b. continuity/stages
c. stability/change
I. Prenatal development and the newborn 412
A. at 8 wks. Babies are indistinguishable; by 4-5 mos. different
B. Sex determined by 23rd chromosome
C. X comes from mother or father; females have two, males one
D. Y comes from father; paired w/X to form male
E. Y leads to production of testosterone; most imp. Male hormone but females also have
F. Gender: biologically or social influenced male/female characteristics
G. Zygote: fertilized eggs
1. Less than half survive past 2 wks.
2. After ten days zygote becomes embryo
H. After 2 mos. looks human and is called fetus
I. Fetus hears mother’s voice and prefers post-birth
J. Teratogens, agents that can cross placenta causing harm
L. Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) leading cause of mental retardation
Brain abnormalities, small disproportioned head
The competent newborn
What are some newborn abilities, and how do researchers explore infants’ mental abilities?
K. Rooting reflex when touched on cheek opens mouth to find mother’s breast
Moro reflex or startle reflex: when a baby feels a sudden loss of support she will throw her arms out.
Babinsky reflex: toes flare, and then curl back when bottom of foot is stroked
Plantar reflex: toe curl when ball of foot is pressed
Swimming reflex: if held under water baby will hold breath and pump arms and legs
Stepping reflex: moving legs up and down when held over a flat surface
L. Habituation: decrease in responding with repeated stimulation
Spencer and Quinn used a novelty preference procedure to figure out what infants focus on in their environment.
II. Infancy and Childhood 415
Physical development
During infancy and childhood, how do the brain and motor skills develop?
Brain development
A. Maturation biological processes that promote development
The association areas of the brain are the last to develop.
B. Rosenzweig and Krech found that rats develop thicker cortex in playground environment v. those in isolation.
C. For optimal development early years are critical
Motor development develops in a predictable sequence with genes playing a major role
Maturation and infant memory 417
“Infantile amnesia” lack of memories before three due to neurons being immature; experience helps develop better memory
Cognitive development
From the perspective of Jean Piaget and today’s researchers, how does a child’s mind develop?
Piaget interested in children’s wrong answer; he is to cognitive development understanding as Copernicus is to solar system understanding.
D. Plasticity the brain can reorganize pathways where there’s damage or adjacent neurons can compensate
Child’s brain, more plasticity due to excess neurons
Experience influences motor behavior: more neurons connect
III. Cognitive Development, 147
A. Cognition processes for thinking, remembering and knowing
B. Jean Piaget’s Stage Theory (see table 9.1 p. 420)
His research is based on what is considered one of the 40 greatest experiments of all time
Key terms
1. Schemas a framework helping us to organize information
2. Assimilation interpreting new info in terms of existing schemas
ex. all four legged creatures are doggies to a small child who knows dogs
3. Accommodation adapting your schemas to fit new info
Ex. child realizes not all four legged creatures are dogs
C. Stages
1. Sensorimotor Birth - age 2
Understand world through senses/motor activities
Lack object permanence until around 1: when baby realizes objects exist even when hidden
Today’s researchers view development as more continuous than Piaget did. He underestimated children’s competence.
2. Pre-Operational ages 2 to 6/7
Language development
Lacks concrete thinking
Lacks conservation: that a change in size doesn’t change quantity; volume, length and area conservation errors are made.
Egocentrism: unable to see other’s point of view
Symbolic thinking occurs earlier than Piaget thought possible as shown in Judy DeLoache’s experiment with 2 and 3 year olds using Snoopy dolls in a miniature setting and a real room.
Theory of mind (David Premack and Gary Woodruff) 422
Preschoolers develop ability to infer about others’ mental states
Ability to tease, empathize and persuade follows
Between 5 and 8 learn that a thought can produce feeling
Autism and Mind Blindness Close up: pp. 424-425
Child is deficient in communication and social interaction skills
Have difficulty understand others’ states of mind.
Speech difficulty
Clumsiness
Fibers that connect various brain regions are altered
Autism spectrum disorder
Asperger’s syndrome: high functioning autism
Simon Baron Cohen says that autism represents an extreme male brain: far less empathy and much more rule based.
Brain studies indicate those with autism have much less activity in areas of the brain with high concentration of mirror neurons.
By 7, children think in words; Lev Vygotsky said they do this by relying on inner speech, no longer thinking outloud,
3. Concrete Operational Stage 6/7 to 11 423
Child understands concrete operations and mathematical transformations (reversing mathematical operations)
Logical thinking
4. Formal Operational 12 and up 423
Reasoning expands to abstract thinking
Able to solve problems to hypothetical situations
Assessment of Piaget 423
1. Cognition unfolds in the sequence Piaget suggests
2. Younger children more capable than he believed
3. Development is more continuous than he thought
IV. Social Development, 426
How do parent-infant attachments form?
A. Children develop attachments to those who care for them
B. Prefer familiar faces/voices
C. After object permanence child develops stranger anxiety: fear of strangers after 8 mos.
D. Origins of Attachment: emotional tie with caregiver
Body contact
E. Harry Harlow’s monkey studies: considered one of the 40 greatest psychology experiments of all time
He created two artificial mothers for infant monkeys. It was thought the mother with the nourishment would occupy most of the monkey’s attention. Not so.
1. Monkeys preferred the cloth mother over the wire mesh mother with milk
Harlow (1971) concluded body contact is more important than nourishment to attachment
Familiarity
F. Critical period: optimal period after birth when exposure to things to leads to proper development
G. Humans don’t have a critical period
H. Imprinting: certain animals form attachments after birth
Konrad Lorenz (1937) studied imprinting of ducklings
Children do not imprint but they do have a sensitive period during which mere exposure to people and things fosters fondness.
I. Attachment differences: Temperament and Parenting 427
How have psychologists studied attachment differences, and what have they learned about the effects of temperament and parenting?
1. Mary Ainsworth studies (1979)
2. Attachment: seeking closeness with caregiver
3. Secure attachment: 60 percent of infants display this toward their caregiver.
Results from parents who are Trustworthy, Dependable and Responsive
4. Ainsworth’s strange situation: at one year child is put in one and indicates their emotional health based on how secure their attachment is with their mother
5. Sensitive, responsive mothers have infants who are securely attached
Temperament: characteristic emotional reactivity and intensity
1. Some babies are born relaxed/cheerful, while others born tense/irritable
2. Identical twins will have more similar temperaments than non-identical
6. Erik Erikson: securely attached children approach life with a basic trust: the world is predictable and trustworthy
7. Most abusive parents have been neglected and battered as children
8. Deprivation of attachment 430
Causes withdrawal and fear
Harlow’s monkeys were socially scarred after being reared by artificial mothers.
Most children who grow up under adversity are resilient.
9. Most abusers were abused, but most abused children do not later become violent or abusive parents
10. Childhood trauma does leave “footprints” on the brain in the form of fewer new brain neurons later in life
11. Disruption of attachment 431
John Bowlby studies (1973): separation from family can lead to being upset, withdrawn and despair.
Does day care affect attachment?
Those in day care had slightly advanced thinking and language skills
Family poverty consigns children to poor quality day care
Quality day care does not harm secure attachment
Self-Concept 432
How do children’s self-concepts develop, and how are children’s traits related to parenting styles?
By age 12 most children develop their self-concept, their sense of worth and identity; positive self-concepts produce optimism, confidence and independence
Self-concept sense of identity and personal worth
Self-awareness begins when we recognize our self in a mirror: Rouge Test, noticed around 15-18 months. Other species recognize their self as well.
Parenting Styles 433
Child rearing practices
1. Authoritarian parents impose rules and expect obedience
2. Authoritative parents demanding yet responsive; open communication allowing exceptions
3. Permissive parents submit to children’s desires making few demands
4. Rejecting neglecting parents disengaged, expecting and getting little
5. Diane Baumrind’s studies (1996): Authoritative parenting leads to high self esteem and confidence and self reliance, greatest sense of self control and highest motivation
Culture and Child-Rearing 434
Asians and Africans have a strong sense of family self. Their collectivist cultures value family over the individual. European cultures value individual goals and pride.
Gender Development 435
Gender: the biological and social characteristics by which we define male and female.
Gender similarities and differences
What are some ways in which males and females tend to be alike and to differ?
1. Gender and aggression. There is a gender gap in physical but not relational aggression.
2. Gender and social power. Men are seen as more dominant and independent; women seen as more democratic and supportive. Most legislators are men and women are underpaid compared to men.
3. Gender and social connectedness. Carol Gilligan believes women are more concerned with making connections (1982). Women are more interdependent and when facing stress practice “tend and befriend”.
The nature of gender 437
How do nature and nurture together form our gender?
1. Mother (egg) contributes the X chromosome
2. The father’s (sperm) chromosome (X or Y) determines the baby’s sex
A female embryo exposed to too much testosterone leads to a female who:
Acts more aggressive and,
Acts more tomboyish … will be treated more like a boy
The nurture of gender 439
Gender roles
1. Role: cluster of prescribed actions
When we don’t follow roles we can feel anxiety because of normative social influence acting on us: we’re not doing what we’re supposed to do.
2. Gender role: expectations for how males/females should act
Gender and Child-Bearing 440
3. Gender identity: one’s sense of being male or female
4. Gender-typing: acquisition of a traditional masculine or feminine
5. Social learning theory
You learn your behavior by observing and imitating the behavior of a model
And then being rewarded or punished when you display that behavior
6. Gender schema theory
Children learn more from their cultures a concept of what a male or female is and adjust their behavior to those observations
Your culture teaches you what it means to be male/female and, you behave in that way.
Androgyny:
•Sandra Bem
•Blend of masculinity and femininity results in greater behavioral adaptiveness
•Androgynous people have a balance of masculine and feminine characteristics
Peers and Parents 441
To what extent is development shaped by early stimulation, by parents and by peers?
A. Parental influence
Influence on children is less than popular psychology assumes
3. Prenatal environment
Those who develop with separate placentas are somewhat less similar in their psychological traits
B. Experience and the brain
1. Repeated learning experiences help develop neural connections
2. Mark Rosezweig and David Krech (1984, 1987) showed how rats living in an enriched enviro had a thicker and heavier brain cortex
3. The Mozart Effect was one failed attempt to improve cognitive development by exposing infants to classical music.
4. Tiffany Field found that “handled” infant rats and premature babies developed faster neurologically and gained more weight (2007).
How much credit or blame do parents deserve?
Parents matter but on personality measures children from the same family share few characteristics.
C. Peer influence
1. smoking, cooperation, becoming popular all influenced by peers
2. Judith Harris: children get their culture from their peers (1998, 2007)
3. Howard Gardner: parents and peers are complementary (1998).
V. Adolescence 445
What physical changes mark adolescence?
Transition from childhood to adulthood
A. Sexual maturity is occurring earlier due to nutrition
1. Begins with puberty, girls at 11, boys at 13
2. Early maturation is good for boys
3. Early maturation is stressful for girls
B. Primary sex characteristics
1. Reproductive organs
C. Secondary sex char.
1. Girls breasts, hips
2. Boys facial hair, voice
D. Landmarks
1. Boys, ejaculation (first one usually as a nocturnal emission—spermarche). Girls, Menarche (the beginning of menstruation)
E. Personality is modified during adolescence
Frontal lobe development lags behind emotional development; this and hormonal surge explains:
Impulsiveness
Risky behaviors
Emotional storms
Teen brains aren’t fully capable of making long range planning or curbing impulses
F. Reasoning is self-focused: “ no one understands me”
Cognitive development 448
How did Piaget, Kohlberg and later researchers describe adolescent cognitive and moral development?
For Piaget this was formal operational thinking.
VI. Developing Morality
Lawrence Kohlberg built on the thinking of Piaget
His research is considered one of the 40 greatest psychology experiments of all time (1981, 1984). He gave young boys a moral dilemma (Heinz’s wife was dying and he couldn’t afford the lifesaving medicine) and had them reason it out to his research assistants.
A. Pre conventional Morality to age 9
You obey to avoid punishment or gain rewards
B. Conventional Morality by early adolescence
You follow actions that gain social approval or maintain order
You obey because it is the law
C. Post conventional Morality
You follow what affirms people’s rights or ethical considerations based on
Your own perceptions
Attained by those with abstract reasoning and formal operations
Critics charged that those from Western cultures reason differently from Asian cultures
Moral feeling
Jonathan Haidt’s social intuitionist account of morality
Feelings come before reasoning; therefore we can make some moral judgments rather quickly without thinking
Moral action
Service learning programs improve school attendance and lower dropout rates.
Those who learn to delay gratification become more responsible and have better academic outcomes.
D. Criticisms of Kohlberg’s theory
1. Moral behavior is also influenced by the social situation and attitudes
2. Mostly studied males
Carol Gilligan (Colleague of Kohlberg)
Emphasized the study of female moral reasoning and found differences with males
Females have a care orientation and males have a justice orientation
3. Only studied individual decision-making (cultural bias for individualism)
VI. Social Development 450
What are the social tasks and challenges of adolescence?
Identity one’s sense of self