Title: LIFESPAN DEVELOPMENT
1LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT
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A Topical Approach to
Motor, Sensory, and Perceptual Development
John W. Santrock
2Motor, Sensory, and Perceptual Development
- Motor Development
- Sensory and Perceptual Development
- Perceptual-Motor Coupling
3Dynamic Systems View
Motor Development
- Seeks to explain how motor behaviors are
assembled for perceiving and acting - Motivation leads to new motor behavior a
convergence of - Nervous system development
- Bodys physical properties
- Childs motivation to reach goal
- Environmental support for the skill
4Sample Reflexes
Motor Development
5Gross Motor Skills
Motor Development
- Motor skills that involve large-muscle activities
- Infancy
- Development of posture
- Locomotion and crawling
- Learning to walk
- No set sequence of development help
- of caregivers important
- more skilled and mobile in second year
6Milestones inGross Motor Development
Motor Development
Fig. 5.3
7Gross Motor Skills
Motor Development
- Childhood
- Improved walking, running, jumping,
- climbing, learn organized sports skills
- Positive and negative sport outcomes
- Adolescence - Skills continue to improve
- Adulthood
- Peak performance of most sports before 30
- Biological functions decline with age
8Guidelines for Parents and Coaches of Children in
Sports
Motor Development
9Movement and Aging
Motor Development
Fig. 5.4
10Fine Motor Skills
Motor Development
- Involves more finely tuned movements, such as
finger dexterity - Infancy Reaching and grasping
- Size and shape of object matters
- Experience affects perceptions and vision
- Early Childhood Pick up small objects
- Some difficulty building towers
- Age 5 hand, arm, fingers move together
11Fine Motor Skills
Motor Development
- Childhood and adolescence
- Writing and drawing skills emerge, improve
- Steadier at age 7 more precise movements
- By 10-12, can do quality crafts, master
difficult - piece on musical instrument
- Adulthood speed may decline in middle and late
adulthood, but most use compensation strategies - Older adults can still learn new motor tasks
12Origin and Development of Handedness
Motor Development
- Genetic inheritance
- Right-handedness dominant in all cultures
- Right hand preference in thumb-sucking begins in
the womb - Head-turning preference in newborns
- Preference later leads to handedness
13Handedness and Other Characteristics
Motor Development
- 85 to 95 percent of right-handed primarily
process speech in left hemisphere - Left handed
- Are more likely to have reading problems
- Show more variation
- Have better spatial skills
- More common among mathematicians,
- musicians, artists, and architects
14What Are Sensation and Perception?
Sensory and Perceptual Development
- Sensation occurs when information contacts
sensory receptors - Perception interpretation of sensation
15The Ecological View
Sensory and Perceptual Development
- People directly perceive information in the world
around them - Perception brings people in contact with the
environment to interact with it and adapt to it - All objects have affordances opportunities for
interaction offered by objects necessary to
perform activities
16Studying Infant Perception
Sensory and Perceptual Development
- Visual preference method to determine if
infants can distinguish between various stimuli - Habituation and Dishabituation
- Habituation decreased responsiveness to
stimulus - Dishabituation recovery of habituated response
- Tracking moving eyes and/or head to follow
moving objects - Videotape equipment, high-speed computers
17Infants Visual Perception
Sensory and Perceptual Development
18Perceptual Constancy
Sensory and Perceptual Development
19Vision in Childhood
Sensory and Perceptual Development
- Improved color detection, visual expectations,
controlling eye movements (for reading) - Preschoolers may be farsighted
- Signs of vision problems
- Rubbing eyes, blinking, squinting
- Irritability at games requiring distance vision
- Closing one eye, tilting head to see, thrusting
- head forward to see
20Aging Vision In Adulthood
Sensory and Perceptual Development
- Loss of Accommodation presbyopia
- Decreased blood supply to eye smaller visual
field, increased blind spot - Slower dark adaptation
- Declining color vision greens, blues, violets
- Declining depth perception problems with steps
or curbs
21Glare Vision and Aging
Sensory and Perceptual Development
Fig. 5.12
22Diseases of the Eye
Sensory and Perceptual Development
- Cataracts thickening eye lens that causes
vision to become cloudy, opaque, distorted - Glaucoma damage to optic nerve because of
pressure created by buildup of fluid in eye - Macular degeneration involves deterioration of
retina
23Hearing
Sensory and Perceptual Development
24Hearing
Sensory and Perceptual Development
- Fetus hears in last 2 months of pregnancy
- Newborns
- cannot hear soft sounds well
- display auditory preferences
- sensitive to human speech
- Infants less sensitive to sound pitch
- Most childrens hearing is inadequate
- otitis media middle ear infection
25Hearing
Sensory and Perceptual Development
- Adolescence
- Most have excellent hearing
- Adulthood
- Decline begins about age 40
- Males lose sensitivity to high-pitched sounds
- sooner than females
- Gender differences may be due to occupation
26Other Senses
Sensory and Perceptual Development
27Intermodal Perception
Sensory and Perceptual Development
- Ability to relate and integrate information about
two or more sensory modalities, such as vision
and hearing - Exists in newborns
28The End
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