Early development - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Early development

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Early development Depiction of the Fetus at 10 weeks Gender typically determined by sonogram at 20 weeks (not always accurate) Gender test can be done sooner and more ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early development


1
Early development
  • Depiction of the Fetus at 10 weeks
  • Gender typically determined by sonogram at 20
    weeks (not always accurate)
  • Gender test can be done sooner and more
    accurately by extracting amniotic fluid from the
    placenta

2
Development of humans
  • Zygote conception 2 weeks genetic structure
    is formed
  • Embryo 2 to 8 weeks All of the organs are
    formed and will begin to function shortly limbs
    have also begun to form
  • Fetus 9 weeks to birth
  • Prior to the 11th week, a yoke sac provides blood
    cells for the fetus. After the 11th week, the
    fetus own liver, spleen, and bone marrow take
    over blood production.
  • Umbilical cord provides food and oxygen removes
    waste
  • Thumb sucking may occur if the limb floats around
    the mouth
  • Toxic agents at different developmental periods
    will result in different types of damage (e.g.,
    late limbs vs. early organs)

3
Early abilities of the infant
  • Reflexes (rooting, sucking, babinski or palmer,
    stepping, orienting, gag, etc.)
  • Can recognize mothers voice within 2 days
  • Initially the visual system is only accurate up
    to 6 inches (distance from babys face to
    mothers when breast feeding).

4
Important environmental factors
0
  • Physical contact warmth, contact, feeding
  • Harlows (1958) monkeys choice of mothers
  • Familiarity strong attraction to facial
    features that were ingrained during critical
    periods
  • Lorenz (1952) demonstrated the importance of
    imprinting in ducks
  • Humans show periods of sensitivity rather than
    critical periods
  • Deprivation typically results in aggression, and
    asocial behavior

5
Early parental learning
  • Attachment styles in animals (Bowlby) and in
    humans (Ainesworth)
  • Secure, avoidant, anxious-ambivalent
    (disorganized)
  • Parenting styles although there are innate
    differences between children, the childs
    environment (which includes parenting) can also
    alter outcomes
  • authoritarian, permissive, authoritative

6
Theoretical stages of development
  • Piaget (1969, 1972)
  • Sensorimotor, 12-18 months reflexes, movement
  • Preoperational, 2-7 yrs internal mental
    representations (object permanence), egocentric
  • Concrete operations, 7-12 yrs conservation of
    mass, reversible processes, etc.
  • Formal Operations, 12 yrs - abstract thinking,
    second order relations
  • Vygotsky (1934) zone of proximal development
    difference between observable abilities and
    potential (given the right context)

7
Research to study development
  • Symbolic representation (vs. the shrinking or
    enlarging machine) Judy DeLoache
  • Language acquisition (sounds, vocal chord
    training follows understanding, use of sign
    language is more advanced)
  • Object permanence may develop much earlier
    (gazing times for impossible events)
  • Kagen temperament (Neuroticism Extraversion)

8
Eriksons Developmental Stages (lifespan model)
0
1. Trust vs. mistrust - infant learns to trust parents for survival needs 4. Industry vs. Inferiority - trial and error with mastery, learn which tasks you can do. 7. Generativity vs. stagnation - Have you achieved anything productive?
2 Autonomy vs shame - learn to act independent of parents 5. Identity vs. Role confusion - self identity begins to form (why now?) 8. Integrity vs. despair - Happiness with ones life, though resigned to the fact its ending
3. Initiative vs. guilt - learn to initiate actions, thoughts, and emotional experiences 6.Intimacy vs isolation adult relationships decision is often made more than once
9
Eriksons lifespan development
0
  • Most development occurs early in life (5 of 8
    stages by adolescence)
  • A series of conflicts which must be resolved by
    achieving a balance
  • Stage theory implies that early problems
    negotiating stages leads to later problems
  • Most research suggests that the developmental
    nature of the stages is largely determined
    socially

10
Moral Development
0
  • 1. Preconventional
  • Dont get caught
  • Whats in it for me
  • 2. Conventional
  • I am good/nice
  • Preserve social order
  • 3. Postconventional
  • Ensuring the rights of all
  • What is best for everyone
  • Theoretical dilemmas vs. reality
  • Men vs. women

11
Sensation and Perception
0
  • Information from the environment is transferred
    to our brain by way of a series of neurochemical
    messages.
  • Primed to detect changes in the environment
    (i.e., to notice differences) detection when
    neurons fire
  • Absolute threshold amount of a stimulus needed
    to detect it 50 of the time.

12
JNDs (just noticeable differences)
0
  • Difference threshold (JND) the amount of change
    in a stimulus necessary to detect that change 50
    of the time
  • The JND can be calculated as a constant
    proportion of the original stimulus (Webers Law)
  • e.g., electric shock (.01), heaviness (.02),
    loudness (.05), brightness (.08), salty taste
    (.20)

13
The firing and resting of neurons
0
  • Sensory adaptation neurons become fatigued from
    constant firing, so this process slows down. This
    results in decreased sensitivity for unchanging
    stimuli
  • Why do the receptors in our eyes not grow
    fatigued from unchanging stimuli? (less
    sensitivity not seeing them)
  • Eyes are constantly quivering so that the same
    information does not appear on the same
    photoreceptors. When eyes are held steady,
    objects disappear

14
Vision
0
15
Receptors in the eyes
  • Human visual receptors are sensitive to
    wavelengths from 400-700 nanometers, which is a
    small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum
  • Rods primarily used to detect light
  • located largely in the periphery of the retina
  • app. 120 million, but only one type
  • abundant in all vertebrates.
  • Cones Primarily used to detect color and detail
  • More concentrated in the fovea
  • 7-8 million, and 3 types
  • adapt faster to changes in light
  • abundant in species active in the day
  • About 1/50 are color blind (more males) and most
    common type is red-green color blindness

16
Ambiguous Images
0
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18
Necker Cube
0
19
Context effects
0
  • The brain uses information surrounding any
    stimulus to define the stimulus as well as
    general (Gestalt) principles of similarity,
    continuity, closure, and proximity.
  • Sometimes the surrounding info can result in
    erroneous conclusions by the brain (e.g., the
    blind spot example figure-ground comparisons,
    the Muller-Lyer illusion, the size of the sun on
    the horizon, contrast effects, etc.)
  • Information can also be neglected or obscured due
    to 1) The object, 2) the surrounding
    information, 3) expectations, and 4) attention.
  • http//people.uncw.edu/cohend/teach/cinema/INDEX.H
    TM
  • Occipital lobes primarily for vision

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24
Context and Top Down Processing
  • Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde
    Uinervtisy, it deosnt mttaer in waht oredr the
    ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng
    is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit
    pclae. The rset can be a toatl mses and you can
    sitll raed it wouthit porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae
    the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by
    istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.

25
Color vision theories
0
  • Trichromatic theory there are three types of
    cones (responding to three primary colors varying
    in wavelengths)
  • Opponent process theory a single neuron is
    responsible for the detection of two colors, one
    while firing and one while inhibited
  • Red-green, blue-yellow, black-white
  • Explains after image effects and color blindness
    explains the 4 primary colors
  • Retinex theory We perceive color through the
    cerebral cortexs comparison of various retinal
    patterns (i.e., color is a construction of the
    brain, not a property of the light itself.
  • All three theories provide some important details
    of color vision.

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27
Cues for visual distance
0
  • Binocular cues
  • 1) convergence (muscular)
  • 2) retinal disparity
  • How can you convey distance on a two-dimensional
    plain?
  • Monocular cues
  • Relative size, relative height, relative
    brightness, overlap, texture (smooth from greater
    distance), linear perspective, relative motion
    (fixation point beyond it objects move with us,
    vs. before it)

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33
Hearing
0
  • Two theories on how it works
  • 1) place theory we hear different pitches
    because sound waves of different frequencies
    trigger receptors at different points along the
    membrane (high pitch sounds occur at the
    beginning of the membrane near the cochlea) the
    guitar string analogy

34
Hearing
0
  • 2) frequency theory membrane vibrates (neurons
    fire) with the same frequency as the incoming
    sound waves
  • Problem is that a neuron can only fire 1000/sec
    and we hear sound waves beyond such frequencies
  • Solution the volley principle neural cells
    fire alternatively in order to reach the higher
    frequencies (e.g., 2 cells can reach 2000/sec)
  • Sound intensity range from 0 dB (lowest sound
    audible to humans) to 180 dB (rocket launch pad
    hearing loss is inevitable front speakers at
    rock concert 120dB)
  • Loudness (dB 1/10th of bell), Pitch (frequency
    in Hertz), Timbre (complexity 1 sound wave or
    many)
  • Echolocation use of sound to locate source of
    sound
  • Equilibrium fluid in the vestibular sacs of the
    inner ear for balance

35
Sense of smell
0
  • Olfactory functioning a more developed sense in
    other species (e.g., larger portion of the dog
    brain is devoted to smell they experience the
    world in this way, olfactory memories, dream?)
  • Memories based on smell have very long duration
  • Pheromones secreted by animals to trigger
    reactions (identification, territory, sexual
    availability, etc.)
  • Female have more discriminating sense of smell
  • Can ID women from smell of sweat (at 1.5 inches)
  • Can be damaged from infection, disease, smoking
    (2 packs/day for 10 years will need 10 more years
    of abstinence for sense of smell to return to
    normal)

36
Sense of taste
0
  • Taste four basic tastes of sour (sides), bitter
    (back), salty (sides), sweet (tip). (Umami
    taste for glutamatesMSG)
  • Locations are just concentrations of sensitivity
  • Saliva spreads tastes to all parts of the tongue
  • Olfactory sense enhances taste (apple potato
    taste the same without smell only 5 correctly
    identified garlic, chocolate, and coffee without
    smell)
  • Attractiveness of food is influenced by color,
    temp, and texture, along with social/cultural
    experiences (a bowl of worms?)

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38
Senses - continued
  • Kinesthesia skeletal receptors in the muscles
    joints that inform brain of position of limbs
  • Synesthesia A neurological disorder involving a
    mingling of the senses (sensory info is
    interpreted by the wrong sense). Taste how a
    shape feels?

39
Adaptive senses
0
  • Adaptation of the brain is evidenced when sensory
    information is altered to facilitate functioning
    (how long does it take the brain to adapt?)
  • Glasses that invert the visual field (QB from
    Stanford)
  • Madonna

40
Maladaptive senses
0
  • Extra-sensory perception! knowledge of the
    world without using the usual sensory channels
  • Most evidence is anecdotal which is not accurate
    (e.g., forget premonitions that dont occur)
  • Studies in parapsychology focus on ESP with the
    general conclusion that there is no effect
  • Secrets of the psychics
  • Recall that we can perceive without knowing it
    (subliminal perception), but this is not ESP

41
Exam Review
0
  • Questions for next weeks exam? (Bring narrow
    scantron and 2 pencil)
  • Review sections to be covered
  • Please sign-up for experiments ASAP
  • Following the break in the spring semester The
    brain and CNS how neurotransmitters work.
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