Title: Physical Development
1Chapter 3
- Physical Development Biological Aging
2Changes in Body Proportions
- Growth occurs in a cephalocaudal (head to tail)
pattern - The head takes up one-fourth of total body length
at birth, but only one-fifth at age 2. - Growth occurs in a proximodistal (near to far)
pattern. - The head, chest and trunk precede the limbs and
extremities.
3Body Growth in Infancy
- Average North American newborn weight 7 ½ pounds
and is 20 inches long. - Birth weight triples in one year and quadruples
by the end of two years. - By the second year, the child is at 1/5 of its
adult weight (30 lbs.) and ½ its adult height (30
inches). - Muscle tissue increases very slowly.
4Facts about Physical GrowthEarly Childhood
Middle Childhood
- 2-3 inches per year
- 5 pounds per year
- Baby fat declines
- Posture and balance improve due to lower center
of gravity.
- 2-3 inches per year
- 5 pounds per year
- Bones harden (skeletal age), lengthen and broaden
- ligaments are not yet firmly attached.
- Improved strength and muscle tone.
- Primary teeth are replaced with permanent teeth
5Influences on Physical Growth Health
- Genetics
- Hormones
- Emotional well-being
- Nutrition
- Infectious disease
- Childhood injuries
6Influences on Physical Growth Health
Pituitary Growth Hormones
- Growth hormone (GH) needed for development of all
body tissues except CNS genitals - Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) causes the
thyroid gland to release thyroxine, needed for
normal nerve cell development and for GH to have
a full impact on body size
7Influences on Physical Growth Health
Emotional Well Being
- Psychosocial dwarfism
- Caused by extreme emotional deprivation
- Appears between 2 15 years of age
- Can interfere with the production of GH
- Very short stature
- Immature skeletal age
- Severe adjustment problems
- Can be treated
8Body Growth and Gender
- Girls are shorter and lighter and have a higher
ratio of body fat to muscle than boys. - Children differ in the rate of physical growth.
- Skeletal age is the best way to estimate the
childs physical maturity. - African Americans mature faster than Caucasians
and girls mature faster than boys.
9GROWTH IN ADOLESCENCE
10Definition of Adolescence
- Transition between childhood and adulthood
- Physically begins with puberty
- Culturally defined ends gradually with
assumption of adult responsibilities - Lasts nearly a decade (or more) in the U.S.
- culturally exaggerated due to education
11The Growth Spurt of Puberty
- Most rapid growth since infancy
- Average of age 9 for girls 11 for boys
- Girls grow 3.5 inches/year boys 4 inches
- 50 of body weight gained in adolescence
- Also changes in leg length and facial structure
-
12Why Does Puberty Happen Earlier than it Used to?
- Nutrition ? Better than in earlier times
- Hormones ? Found in food supply
- Stress ?
- Fat ?
13Stress Theory of Early Puberty
- Hypothalamus ? pituitary? sex glands ? produce
gonadotrophins - Androgens (testosterone)
- Estrogens (estradiol)
- Pituitary ? thyroid gland ? produces growth
hormone - Cortisol (stress hormone) may trigger early onset
(pituitary activity)
14Fat Theory of Early Puberty
- Weight affects the timing of menarche (106 /- 3
pounds) - Athletes and anorexics become amenorrheic
- Fat and leptin may also be influential
15Early vs. Late Maturation
- Early maturing girls have a less positive body
image - They are more likely to drink, smoke, be
depressed, have an eating disorder or mental
disorder, date and have sex earlier, and have
lower educational and occupational attainment - Berkley Longitudinal Study
16Early vs. Late Maturation
- Early maturing boys are leaders, athletes
- Late maturing boys have a more positive
self-image in their 30s. - Early maturers, both sexes are emotionally
stressed, show academic declines - Berkley Longitudinal Study
17Body Changes in Adulthood that Are Part of Normal
Aging
18Physical Development in Early Middle Adulthood
- Early Adulthood, peak muscle tone joint
function - Middle Adulthood gradual changes,
- lose height, gain weight, in 40s 50s skin
sags, wrinkles, age spots, hair thins, thicker
finger- and toenails, yellow teeth
19Changes in Middle Adulthood (continued)
- Sarcopenia age-related loss of muscle mass
strength - Lose 1-2 per year starting at age 50
- Exercise can help to reduce this loss
- Also lose bone from the late 30s this
accelerates in the 50s
20Changes in Middle Adulthood -Cardiovascular
- Cholesterol increases
- LDL leads to atherosclerosis
- Blood Pressure increases sharply for women at
menopause - Metabolic disorder hypertension, obesity,
insulin resistance, high cholesterol, low HDL,
weight gain (Part of normal aging?) - Weight loss exercise help
- Lungs become less elastic
21Changes in Middle Adulthood - Sexuality
- Climacteric loss of fertility
- Menopause ceasing of menstrual cycles (average
age 52) - Drop in estrogen, hot flashes, nausea, fatigue,
rapid heartbeat - Gradual decline for men (no andropause)
22BRAIN DEVELOPMENT
23Brain Development
- At birth, the brain is at about 30 of its adult
weight. - At age 2, the brain is at about 70 of its adult
weight. - Brain reaches 90 of adult weight by age 6
24Brain Development
- Prenatal neurogenesis 2nd trimester, fetal
period - Post Natal (after birth) (cycle)
- Synaptogenesis dendrite formation
- Synaptic pruning
- Myelination
25Synaptic Transmission
26Brain Development - Synaptogenesis
- The human brain has 100 200 billion neurons at
birth. - During the first two years, fibers from these
form synaptic connections at a rapid rate and
some neurons die as a result.
27Brain Development Synaptic Pruning
- Experience determines brain development.
- Neurons not stimulated lose their synaptic
connections. - Neurons often stimulated strengthen connections
by growth of new dendrites
28Brain Development Glial Cells and Myelination
- Glial cells multiply rapidly during the first two
years. (About half the brains volume) - Glial cells produce myelin to coat neuron axons.
Myelination improves the efficiency of neural
transmission.
29Cerebral Cortex
- The order in which cortical regions develop
corresponds to the order in which capacities
emerge in the growing child.
30Cerebral Cortex
- In the first year, there is a burst of synaptic
growth in the auditory and visual areas. - Areas supporting language show dramatic growth
during toddlerhood. - One of the last regions to develop are the
frontal lobes.
31Brain Development
- Rapid frontal lobe growth at ages 3-6
- Myelination of cerebellum-cortex links, reticular
formation, corpus callosum
32Cerebral Cortex Lateralization Plasticity
- Specialization of functions in the two
hemispheres of the cortex is called
lateralization. - For most people, language, logic and positive
emotion are processed by the left hemisphere.
Spatial and wholistic tasks and negative emotions
are right hemisphere. - Lateralization is very plastic.
33Brain Development Sensitive Periods
- Brain growth spurts, as measured by weight, size
and EEG, occur - 3 to 4- months reach for objects
- 8 months crawl, search for objects
- 12 months walk
- 1.5 -2 years talk
- Ages 9, 12, 15, 18-20
34Brain Development - Understimulation
- Results in deficits in
- Concentration
- Attention
- Anger and other impulse control
35Brain Development - Overstimulation
- Does not result in geniuses.
- May cause infant withdrawal.
- May lead to disappointed parents.
- May cause strain between infants and parents.
36Brain Development in Adolescence
- Reward and pleasure centers (limbic system)
mature before judgment centers (pre-frontal
cortex) do. - Baird others (1999) found that 10-18 year olds
process emotional information using the amygdala,
20-40 year olds use the frontal lobe.
37Brain Changes in Adulthood
- Production of new neurons throughout life
- Growing new dendrites through the 70s
- Brains rewire themselves functional plasticity
- Myelination between cortex limbic system in
40s 50s - Decrease in lateralization
38Mankato Nun Study
- Early-life idea density at 22 linked to fewer
incidences of mild cognitive impairment - Positive emotions linked to longevity
- Teachers showed more moderate intellectual
declines - Sisters with high folic acid levels showed little
Alzheimer-like damage
39Theories of Aging
40Biological Theories of Aging
- Cellular clock (Hayflick)
- 70-80 cell divisions, based on telomeres
- 120-year lifespan
- Free-radical
- Calorie restriction
- antioxidants
41Biological Theories of Aging
- Mitochondrial
- Cellular energy producers
- Linked to free radical theory
- Hormonal Stress
- hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
- Stress decline in immune function