Topic:%20Developmental%20Psychology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Topic:%20Developmental%20Psychology

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Title: Topic:%20Developmental%20Psychology


1
Topic Developmental Psychology
  • Aim How do human beings develop over time
    physically psycholgically?
  • Do Now Describe some of the differences between
    babies, small children, teenagers, and adults?
    List as many differences as you can (they way
    they think, act, feel, what they value, etc.)

2
Developmental Psychology
  • A field of psychology that focuses on how humans
    develop across their life span.
  • Nature or nurture?
  • Nature we are who we are due to biology
    (genetics)
  • Nurture behavior is molded by experiences
    environment

3
Brainstorm and list all the universal behaviors
(behaviors shared among all cultures) that you
can think of
4
8 Week Old Embryo
5
12 Week Old Fetus
6
18-Week Old Fetus
7
24 Week Old (6 months)
8
Fraternal, Identical TwinsWhats the difference?
  • Fraternal (dizygotic)
  • Separate fertilized eggs (50 shared genes- no
    more genetic similarity than normal siblings)
  • Identical (Monozygotic)
  • Single fertilized egg split in two clones
  • (100 shared genes)

9
Fraternal vs. Identical
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Fraternal vs. Identical
  • Fraternal / Identical twin study findings-
    provide specifics for the following
  • Alzheimers
  • Identical 60 / Fraternal30
  • Extraversion / neuroticism
  • Identical more similar than fraternal
  • Divorce rates
  • Identical x5.5 vs. fraternal x1.6
  • Schizophrenia
  • 50, 10, 3, 1 (identical, fraternal, sibling,
    stranger)
  • What are the limitations of these studies?
  • Genetics or environment? How do we
    differentiate?

12
What sort of environmental or behavior influences
can impact how a baby develops in utero (in the
mothers womb?
13
Prenatal Influences on Development
  • Nutrition
  • Anxiety
  • Mothers general health
  • Maternal age (older higher chances of defects
    on first birth)
  • Teratogens any agent that causes a birth defect
    (e.g., drugs, radiation, viruses)
  • Disease

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  • Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS)
  • Defects occurring in infants born to mothers that
    drink heavily during pregnancy
  • leading cause of mental retardation

16
Newborn Baby
  • What can a baby do/not do when they are first
    born?
  • What does a woman experience physically and
    emotionally immediately after birth?

17
Infant Reflexes
  • Rooting Reflex- turning the head and opening the
    mouth in the direction of a touch on the cheek
  • Grasping Reflex
  • Startle Reflex
  • Babinski - fanning and curling toes when foot is
    stroked

18
Language Development
  • Infant preference for human speech
  • before 6 months can hear differences used in all
    languages
  • after 6 months begin to hear only differences
    used in native language
  • Cooingvowel sounds produced 24 months
  • Babblingconsonant/vowel sounds between 4 to 6
    months
  • Even deaf infants coo and babble

19
Infant Perception
  • Object Permanence
  • -Babies dont realize that objects are still
    there even when they cant see them
  • Selective Attention
  • How long babies will look at something without
    looking away

20
Postpartum Depression Psychosis
  • PPD short term type of clinical depression -
    occurs within the first 4 weeks after delivery.
  • Postpartum Psychosis sudden onset of psychotic
    symptoms following childbirth. A typical example
    is for a woman to become irritable, have extreme
    mood swings and hallucinations, and possibly need
    psychiatric hospitalization.

21
Imprinting in Animals
22
Harlow Monkey Studies
  • Took baby monkey away from real mother and
    replaced with 2 fake surrogates a wire mother
    and a cloth mother
  • Money consistently preferred the cloth mother
    even when wire mother offered food

23
60 Minutes The Baby Lab
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vFRvVFW85IcU

24
Evolutionary Psychology
  • Premise
  • (Darwins ) natural selection shapes our
    behavior, thinking (over time)
  • Certain traits, behaviors that enhance survival
    are passed on over generations

25
Questions to Consider
  1. Why do infants start to fear strangers about the
    time they become mobile?
  2. Why are most parents so passionately devoted to
    their children?
  3. Why do so many more people have phobias about
    spiders and snakes than guns and electricity?
  4. Why are men quicker to perceive friendliness as
    sexual interest?

26
Parental Fears
  • Imagine youre a parent which, if you had to
    choose, would you allow your children to do of
    these choices, and why?
  • 1.) Go to a friends house where the parents have
    several handguns, or friends house where the
    parents have a pool in the backyard?
  • 2.) Walk to a store alone late at night or visit
    a relatives house alone?
  • 3.) Would you inspect your childs Halloween
    candy before allowing them to eat it, or not?

27
Parenting Discussion
  • How does a parents physical affection impact
    children?
  • At what age do children no longer want physical
    affection from parents? Does gender matter?
  • How long is it healthy to live with your parents
    why?

28
Parenting Styles Child Development
  1. How much do you think your parents influence your
    personality?
  2. How would you classify your parents parenting
    style (what kind of parents are/were they?)
  3. How much did their parenting style impact who you
    are?
  4. Based on your own experiences, where do you think
    your own parenting style would converge (agree)
    or diverge (disagree) from your parents? Why?

29
Authoritarian Parents
  • Children are expected to follow the strict rules
  • Parents fail to explain the reasoning behind
    these rules. If asked to explain, the parent
    might simply reply, "Because I said so." These
    parents have high demands, but are not responsive
    to their children.
  • Leads to children who are obedient but they rank
    lower in happiness, social competence and
    self-esteem.

30
Authoritative/Democratic Parents
  • Willing to listen to children
  • More nurturing and forgiving rather than
    punishing.
  • Disciplinary methods are supportive, rather than
    punitive.
  • Results children are happy, capable and
    successful

31
Permissive Parents
  • Few demands to make of their children.
  • Rarely discipline
  • More friend than parent.
  • Results children rank low in happiness and
    self-regulation - likely to experience problems
    with authority and perform poorly in school.

32
Helicopter Parents
33
Birth Order Development Discussion
  1. How many siblings do you have (if any)?
  2. Where do you fall in terms of birth order in your
    family?
  3. How do you think parents treat/raise children
    differently based on birth order?
  4. How do you think this impacts how children grow
    up and develop (how does being the oldest impact
    your personality more than being the youngest,
    for example)?

34
  • Oldest children tend to have slightly higher IQs
    (intelligence), weigh more, have higher paying
    jobs

35
Child Abuse
  • The physical injury, sexual abuse, or neglect of
    children under 18.
  • What do you think some psychological effects of
    child abuse can be on a childs behavior and
    feelings?

36
  • Aim How do we develop a sense of gender
    identity?
  • What do you think some of the psychological (how
    they think, feel, act, respond to thing, etc.)
    and biological differences are between men and
    women?

37
  • Gender identity the way in which an individual
    self-identifies with a gender category
    (male/female), Usually formed by age 3.
  • Gender identity disorder (GID) describe persons
    who experience significant gender dysphoria
    (discontent with their biological sex and/or the
    gender they were assigned at birth).

38
UK mom Beck Laxton kept son's sex a secret for 5
years to avoid stereotyping
39
The Transgendered Community
  • General term for those whose behaviors deviate
    extremely from traditional gender roles
  • Feel they were born in the wrong body
  • Diagnosed with Gender Identity Disorder
  • Gender Reassignment surgery hormone treatment
    to change biological sex

40
Gender Differences???
  1. How they think (or what they most think about)
  2. How they feel?
  3. How they communicate?
  4. How they deal with stress or problems?
  5. How they mature?
  6. How they perform in school?
  7. Are impacted by diseases or disorders (prevalence
    thereof)
  8. Any other behavior you can think of

41
Gender Development
  • Children develop a concrete understanding of
    gender by age 7, but this develops in stages from
    birth
  • 7 months distinguish male/females faces
  • 1 year distinguishes male/female voices
  • 2 years understands gender stereotypes (dress,
    behavior, etc)
  • 2-3 develop a sense of gender identity
  • By 7, children believe that gender is a constant,
    permanent thing that cannot change (if mommy
    wears pants, shes still a girl!)

42
  • Mens brains 8-10 larger - section linked to
    arithmetic abilities larger in men (however,
    women are better at straightforward math like
    addition/subtraction, men better at reasoning
    problems)
  • Womens brains mature sooner - 2 key language
    centers larger in women
  • Women process pain signals in the parts of their
    brains that handle emotion, while men process
    same signals in the analytic regions

43
  • Women
  • Has 70 more body fat, possesses 40 less muscle
    and are 5 inches shorter
  • Enter puberty 2 yrs. sooner
  • More likely to smell faint odors, express
    emotions freely, speak more words per day
  • 2x more vulnerable to depression anxiety, and
    10X for eating disorders
  • Men
  • 4X more likely to be diagnosed with autism,
    color-blindness, hyperactivity, and antisocial
    personality disorder
  • More likely to offer opinions, speak assertively,
    interrupt, smile less, and stare more while
    women are more likely to express support.

44
  • Gender Differences in Aggression
  • U.S. male to female arrest ratio for murder is 9
    to 1.
  • Men are more likely to offer answers to questions
    even when they dont actually know the answer.
  • Gender differences show early
  • Boys play in large groups with an activity focus
    and little discussion
  • Girls play in smaller groups. Their play tends to
    be less competitive and they are more open to
    feedback then males

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