Title: Chapter 11: Human Development Across the Life Span
1Chapter 11 Human Development Across the Life Span
2Progress Before BirthPrenatal Development
- 3 phases
- germinal stage first 2 weeks
- conception, implantation, formation of placenta
- embryonic stage 2 weeks 2 months
- formation of vital organs and systems
- fetal stage 2 months birth
- bodily growth continues, movement capability
begins, brain cells multiply - age of viability
3Figure 11.1 Overview of fetal development
4Environmental Factorsand Prenatal Development
- Maternal nutrition
- Malnutrition linked to increased risk of birth
complications, neurological problems, and
psychopathology - Maternal drug use
- Tobacco, alcohol, prescription, and recreational
drugs - Fetal alcohol syndrome
5Environmental Factorsand Prenatal Development
- Maternal illness
- Rubella, syphilis, mumps, genital herpes, AIDS,
severe influenza - Prenatal health care
- Prevention through guidance
6The Childhood Years Motor Development
- Basic Principles
- Cephalocaudal trend head to foot
- Proximodistal trend center-outward
- Maturation gradual unfolding of genetic
blueprint - Developmental norms median age
- Cultural variations
7Easy and Difficult BabiesDifferences in
Temperament
- Longitudinal vs. cross-sectional designs
- Thomas, Chess, and Birch (1970)
- 3 basic temperamental styles
- easy 40
- slow-to-warm-up 15
- difficult 10
- mixed 35
- stable over time
8Easy and Difficult BabiesDifferences in
Temperament
- Kagan Snidman (1991)
- Inhibited vs. uninhibited temperament
- inhibited 15 - 20
- uninhibited 25 - 30
- stable over time, genetically based
9Figure 11.6 Longitudinal versus cross-sectional
research
10Attachment the close emotional bond that forms
between infant and caregiver
- Harlows study of attachment in monkeys
11Early Emotional Development Attachment
- Separation anxiety
- Ainsworth (1979)
- The strange situation and patterns of attachment
- Secure
- Anxious-ambivalent
- Avoidant
- Developing secure attachment
- Bonding at birth
- Daycare
- Cultural factors
- Evolutionary perspectives on attachment
12Diagnostic criteria for 309.21 Separation Anxiety
Disorder
- A. Developmentally inappropriate and excessive
anxiety concerning separation from home or from
those to whom the individual is attached, as
evidenced by three (or more) of the
following (1) recurrent excessive distress when
separation from home or major attachment figures
occurs or is anticipated (2) persistent and
excessive worry about losing, or about possible
harm befalling, major attachment figures (3)
persistent and excessive worry that an untoward
event will lead to separation from a major
attachment figure (e.g., getting lost or being
kidnapped)Â (4) persistent reluctance or refusal
to go to school or elsewhere because of fear of
separation (5) persistently and excessively
fearful or reluctant to be alone or without major
attachment figures at home or without significant
adults in other settings (6) persistent
reluctance or refusal to go to sleep without
being near a major attachment figure or to sleep
away from home (7) repeated nightmares involving
the theme of separation (8) repeated complaints
of physical symptoms (such as headaches,
stomachaches, nausea, or vomiting) when
separation from major attachment figures occurs
or is anticipated - B. The duration of the disturbance is at least 4
weeks. - C. The onset is before age 18 years.Â
- D. The disturbance causes clinically significant
distress or impairment in social, academic
(occupational), or other important areas of
functioning. - E. The disturbance does not occur exclusively
during the course of a Pervasive Developmental
Disorder, Schizophrenia, or other Psychotic
Disorder and, in adolescents and adults, is not
better accounted for by Panic Disorder With
Agoraphobia. - Specify if Early Onset if onset occurs before
age 6 years
13Diagnostic criteria for 313.89 Reactive
Attachment Disorder of Infancy or Early Childhood
- A. Markedly disturbed and developmentally
inappropriate social relatedness in most
contexts, beginning before age 5 years, as
evidenced by either (1) or (2)(1) persistent
failure to initiate or respond in a
developmentally appropriate fashion to most
social interactions, as manifest by excessively
inhibited, hypervigilant, or highly ambivalent
and contradictory responses (e.g., the child may
respond to caregivers with a mixture of approach,
avoidance, and resistance to comforting, or may
exhibit frozen watchfulness)Â (2) diffuse
attachments as manifest by indiscriminate
sociability with marked inability to exhibit
appropriate selective attachments (e.g.,
excessive familiarity with relative strangers or
lack of selectivity in choice of attachment
figures)Â - B. The disturbance in Criterion A is not
accounted for solely by developmental delay (as
in Mental Retardation) and does not meet criteria
for a Pervasive Developmental Disorder. - C. Pathogenic care as evidenced by at least one
of the following (1) persistent disregard of
the child's basic emotional needs for comfort,
stimulation, and affection (2) persistent
disregard of the child's basic physical
needs (3) repeated changes of primary caregiver
that prevent formation of stable attachments
(e.g., frequent changes in foster care)Â - D. There is a presumption that the care in
Criterion C is responsible for the disturbed
behavior in Criterion A (e.g., the disturbances
in Criterion A began following the pathogenic
care in Criterion C). - Specify typeÂ
- Inhibited Type if Criterion A1 predominates in
the clinical presentation Disinhibited Type if
Criterion A2 predominates in the clinical
presentation
14Stage Theories of Development Personality
- Stage theories, three components
- progress through stages in order
- progress through stages related to age
- major discontinuities in development
- Erik Erikson (1963)
- Eight stages spanning the lifespan
- Psychosocial crises determining balance between
opposing polarities in personality
15Figure 11.10 Stage theories of development
16Figure 11.11 Eriksons stage theory
17Stage Theories Cognitive Development
- Jean Piaget (1920s-1980s)
- Assimilation/ Accommodation
- 4 stages and major milestones
- Sensorimotor
- Object permanence
- Preoperational
- Centration, Egocentrism
- Concrete Operational
- Decentration, Reversibility, Conservation
- Formal Operational
- Abstraction
18Figure 11.12 Piagets stage theory
19Figure 11.13 Piagets conservation task
20Figure 11.14 The gradual mastery of conservation
21The Development of Moral Reasoning
- Kohlberg (1976)
- Reasoning as opposed to behavior
- Moral dilemmas
- Measured nature and progression of moral
reasoning - 3 levels, each with 2 sublevels
- Preconventional
- Conventional
- Postconventional
22Figure 11.17 Kohlbergs stage theory
23Adolescence Physiological Changes
- Pubescence
- Puberty
- Secondary sex characteristics
- Primary sex characteristics
- Menarche
- Sperm production
- Maturation early vs. late
- Sex differences in effects of early maturation
24Figure 11.19 Physical development at puberty
25Adolescence Neural Changes
- Increasing myelinization
- Synaptic pruning
- Changes in prefrontal cortex
26The Search for Identity
- Erik Erikson (1968)
- Key challenge - forming a sense of identity
- James Marcia (1988)
- 4 identity statuses
- Foreclosure
- Moratorium
- Identity Diffusion
- Identity Achievement
27The Expanse of Adulthood
- Personality development
- Social development
- Career development
- Physical changes
- Cognitive changes