Title: Infancy Physical and Cognitive Development
1Janet Belskys Experiencing the Lifespan, 1e
Chapter 3 Infancy Physical and Cognitive
Development
2BRAIN BLOSSOMING AND BRAIN SCULPTING
- The Expanding Brain Basic processes responsible
for mental growth - Synaptogenesis making connections between
neurons - Mylenation Developing a fatty cover around the
neurons - Mylenation is not complete until the middle 20s.
- Synaptogenesis is lifelong (meaning we keep
learning and growing till the end of life!) - Each brain region goes through a phase of
exuberant synaptogenesis, and then a pruning
phase when the neurons and connections we dont
need are lost
3BRAIN BLOSSOMING AND BRAIN SCULPTING
4BRAIN BLOSSOMING AND SCULPTING
- More Facts About Brain Pruning
- Exuberant synaptogenesis produces an incredible
excess of connections in each brain region, and
the timing of the pruning phase mirrors the
growth of our abilities in real life. - The pruning phase sets in very early in the
visual cortex, as by age one our vision becomes
adult. - Pruning does not start until late childhood in
the frontal lobes and it continues well into
adolescence in this part of the brain responsible
for higher reasoning and thought.
5FACTS ABOUT BRAIN PLASTICITY
- Brain Plasticity the ability of the brain to
change and adapt to insults - Plasticity may be at its peak early in life
before the pruning phase sets in-meaning some
children can make remarkable recoveries as other
cortical regions take over for damaged segments
of the brain - Although after early childhood the brain becomes
less plastic, we still can grow, develop,
learn, and even (sometimes) compensate for
problems such as a stroke well into our older
years. - Plasticity (and pruning) shows that both nature
(our genetic capacities) and nurture
(environmental input) interact to construct our
brain!
6Basic Newborn States
- Eating the basis of living
- Reflexes are innate, instinctive, automatic
activities programmed by the lower centers of the
brain - Sucking reflex (shown on the left) and the
rooting reflex (shown on the right) help jump
start eating in the early months - Newborn reflexes such as these must be present at
birth and then go away after about month three as
the cortex comes on line - As they approach age two some children become
picky eaterswhich may be built into evolution to
help keep busy toddler explorers from poisoning
themselves!
7Basic Newborn States
- Breast milk A section summary
- Every public health organization recommends
exclusive breast feeding for the first six months
of life - Breast feeding is correlated with a variety of
health benefits and advantagesincluding higher
scores on cognitive tests - However these studies are correlational (so the
good outcomes may also be due to other forces)
and upper middle class moms are more likely to
follow the six month recommendation. - Its very hard to breast feed for months, when
you dont have the luxury of staying home with
your baby, and have to go back to work right
after your childs birth to a low wage job. - Bottom line Social support and a culture that
supports this practice are crucial in the
choice to breast feed a baby or not
8Malnutrition A Serious Developing World Concern
- Undernutrition a chronic lack of adequate food
- Stunting serious height retardation symptomatic
of chronic undernutrition - Stunting is endemic in the least developed
regions of the world - Stunted children may have permanent deficits in
their physical and intellectual capacities - Like infant mortality stunting rates are a
barometer of a nations economic status - Because the U.S provides low income children with
a variety of nutrition programswhile low income
families can be food insecurestunting in our
country and other developed nations is very rare
(or unknown)
9The first communication signal Crying
- Crying is vitally important at every age
during infancy its the only way to communicate
our needs - Crying reaches its life peak in the first
reflex-dominated months of life and then declines
after month four as the cortex comes on line - As they get older infants cry much more in
response to environmental cues (Here comes mom!) - Colic continual frantic crying in early infancy
- Dont blame the mother Colic is caused by an
immature digestive system - Colic typically totally goes away around month 4
- Colic causes new parents incredible stressbut
luckily it is temporary!
10What quiets a young baby?
- Pacifiers are very effective. Early on they can
be the best strategy for soothing a young infant - Swaddling works too as it mirrors conditions of
the cozy womb. - Infant massage helps calm babies (and adults!)
and can help promote growth in premature babies - Try Kangaroo care, holding the baby close to your
body in a baby sling. - Bottom line pick the baby up hold the baby
close rock the child satisfy the need to suck
even take long rides in the car, as motion puts
babies to sleep!
11The main newborn state SLEEPING
-
- Newborns sleep up to 18 hours per day
- They wake up and cry every three to four hours to
eat ! - By six months, caregivers can expect to get their
first good nights sleep - By age one, babies are sleeping about 12 hours
- With additional morning and afternoon naps
- By late preschool, many children give up these
naps - Huge amounts of REM sleep are characteristic of
infancy and prior to adolescence, children do not
have sleep cycles like adults. - The sleep cycle changes in interesting ways
throughout life!
12(No Transcript)
13Sleep facts continued
- Babies (and adults) never sleep through the
night. They learn to self-soothe or put
themselves back to sleep. - Periodic sleep problems are typical in early
childhood - Children with chronic sleep problems produce
stressed out families. - Stressed out families can cause children problems
with sleep (a perfect example of a bi-directional
influence!)
14Two controversial Issues Going In When the Baby
Cries and Co-Sleeping
- Should parents go in when a baby cries out at
night? - According to the behaviorists the answer is NO
according to Bowlbys attachment theory (or
Eriksons stage of basic trust) definitely! - In the first few monthsit is no contest, you
need to respond - After that, the research suggests it may help to
hold off a bit to get the child to learn to
self-soothe - Should parents and children co-sleep?
- Traditionally in our individualistic culture the
answer was NO - But in collectivist cultures NOT co-sleeping is
seen as a form of child abuse - Conclusions its a personal preference, although
co-sleeping in early infancy may slightly
increase the risk of SIDS -
15 When Sleep is Lethal SIDS (Sudden Infant Death
Syndrome)
- The unexpected death of a young baby while
sleeping - SIDS, while very rare, is a major cause of infant
mortality in the developed world - Occurs more often low birth weight and premature
infants - May be related to environmental conditions such
as being exposed to household smoke (nature and
nurture influences are involved) - May be caused by a glitch in the developing
nervous systemas its peak onset is at about 2 to
5 months of age - Putting a baby to sleep on its back (and away
from fluffy bedding) can dramatically reduce the
risk of this tragedy
16SENSORY AND MOTOR DEVELOPMENT
- How do researchers get inside young babies
heads to determine their visual (and cognitive)
capacities? - Through employing the preferential looking
paradigm (human beings are attracted to novelty)
and habituation (once a stimulus becomes familiar
we lose interest. - Put a young baby on a seat, present images, and
track the childs facial expressions and eye
movements
17Basic Facts About Infant Vision
- Babies at birth are legally blind
- Because the visual cortex matures so quickly by
year one, a normal infant can see like an adult. - Newborns understand the basics of size constancy,
. - Visual capacities emerge when we need them but
babies have fascinating capacities and interests
very amazingly early in life
18Some Fascinating Facts About Face Perception
- Newborns prefer faces to other stimuli (and faces
looking at them) - Newborns prefer their mothers face from the
first week of life - Young babies prefer attractive faces!
- Evolutionarily speaking, more symmetrical (better
looking) faces may be a tip off of a healthier
adult - BOTTOM LINE We are programmed to gravitate to
the human world from birth!!
19Seeing Depth and Fearing Heights
- The visual cliff experiment an innovative
technique for determining depth perception - Conclusions Babies see differences in depth
early on but only fear heights around the time
they begin to crawl and so need this fear to
survive
20Facts About Growth and Motor development
- From infancy to adulthood, our bodies expand to
21 times our newborn size. - Growth is most pronounced in infancy and early
childhood and follows the cephalocaudal sequence
from head to tail - Ditto for motor milestones ( first babies lift
their heads, then turn over, then sit, then
stand). - Mass to specific also characterizes motor
development throughout childhood big
uncoordinated movements get more steady, detailed
and refined - Some motor milestones can be accelerated by
practice - Dont get crazy if a baby is somewhat late in
their timetable (or too excited if theyre
early) The pace of physical development has no
relation to later I.Q.! - There is nothing like the joy of seeing each
milestone emerge!
21Travel Has Its Downside
- It changes the caregiver child relationship
- Parents see the baby as a person with a mind of
its own and the need to discipline begins - It requires baby-proofing the house
- Look at life from the perspective of the baby and
take steps to get rid of what could be dangerous - Anticipate problems and stay one step ahead of
the developing child ! - Brainstorm about how to satisfy the babys
essential passion to explore, and at the same
time keep the child safe - Bottom line Fit the environment to the child!
22Cognition
- Piagets Sensorimotor Stage
- Lasts from Birth to age 2 (ends with language)
- Infants are growing mentally by manipulating
objects and physically exploring - Exploration (and getting into everything) is
vital to learning about the world! - Circular Reactions Habits that pin down reality
- Babies must repeat and repeat the same thing in
order to understand the physical properties of
this new planet - primary circular reactions (body centered habits)
- Secondary circular reactions (habits centered on
exploring the outside world) - tertiary circular reactions (little scientist
behaviors) The toddler flexibly experiments
with objects to see how they behave (eg gets into
everything!) -
23(No Transcript)
24Two Basic Sensory Motor Milestones/Achievements
- Means-end behavior understanding you need to
do something different to get to a specific goal
( example, taking off a wrapper, to get to the
candy pushing the buttons on the TV to get the
DVD to emerge pulling the lever to get the
toilet to flush) - Object Permanence Understanding that objects
exist when you dont see them - At the beginning of life life is a series of
disappearing pictures. If you dont see it, it
doesnt exist - Around month five or six, infants begin to look
for hidden objects - As the object concept is developing (at around 8
months to a year) peekaboo becomes an all-time
favorite game - Infants this age make the A not B error (Hide an
object in one place several times, then in
another while the baby is watching and she will
look in the original place!) - MEANS-END BEHAVIOR AND OBJECT PERMANENCE MAKE
SENSE OF THE MYSTERIOUS PASSIONS TODDERS HAVE!!
25Critiques of Piaget (And Another Perspective)
- Babies may understand the basic properties of
objects far younger than Piaget believed - By using techniques such as preferential looking
and setting up physically impossible situations
even very young babies look surprised (showing
they get the idea this cannot occur!) - The understanding of physical reality emerges
gradually, not as Piaget believed, in unitary,
qualitatively different stages. - Using the model of a computer, information
processing theorists track the more gradual,
linear way we really learn -
- BOTTOM LINE PIAGET WAS A GENIUS AT MAKING SENSE
OF INFANT LIFE, BUT SOME OF HIS BASIC CONCEPTS
WERE NOT QUITE RIGHT!
26LANGUAGE BASIC PRINCIPLES
- The ability to make sense of an infinite number
of sentences is what makes us different from
other species - This biologically programmed ability to
understand different sentences and automatically
develop the rules of language (grammar) is
called the LAD (or language Acquisition Device) - The specific language we learn is dependent on
nurture-the place where we grow up - Babies (and adults) have a passion to
communicatewhich defines the social
interactionist perspective on this uniquely
human skill!
27 MILESTONES IN DEVELOPING LANGUAGE
-
- This is the progression to speaking, but babies
can understand what adults are communicating far
earlier than they can articulate words
28 CONNECTING VIA INFANT DIRECTED SPEECH
-
- In every culture adults and older children speak
to babies in a characteristic baby talk-like
way - This simplified exaggerated way of talking
(called infant directed speech) may seem babyish,
but it actually is adaptivehelping babies
distinguish sounds and the breaks between words. - Infants selectively attend to and pay attention
to infant directed speech from a very young age