jj

Lucila Falballa

Lucila Falballa

Set of flashcards Details

Flashcards 360
Language Deutsch
Category Psychology
Level Primary School
Created / Updated 02.01.2013 / 26.07.2022
Weblink
https://card2brain.ch/box/entwicklungspsychologie2
Embed
<iframe src="https://card2brain.ch/box/entwicklungspsychologie2/embed" width="780" height="150" scrolling="no" frameborder="0"></iframe>

 

3. Social contexts 3.1 The family   family types 

family types 

 

3. Social contexts 3.1 The family
  • increasing percentage of unmarried (single) mothers

  • increasing percentage of unmarried (single) mothers

 

1. Physical growth and development in infancy 1.1 Patterns of growth
  •  changes in proportion head/body

• changes in proportion head/body

 

1. Physical growth and development in infancy

1.1 Patterns of growth

  • two general growth patterns

 

1. cephalocaudal pattern (from head to tail) 2. proximodistal (from body center to extremities)

 

1. Physical growth and development in infancy

1.1 Patterns of growth

  • brain development

 

1. neurogenesis (Neurogenese) 2. connectivity (Synaptogenese)  3. myelination (Myelinisierung) 4. pruning (Pruning)

 

1. Physical growth and development in infancy

1.1 Patterns of growth

brain growth 

  • brain growth and pruning in different brain areas (Heterochronie)

 

1. Physical growth and development in infancy

1.1 Patterns of growth

  • plasticity

  • plasticity (Plastizität), importance of early experiences

1. Physical growth and development in infancy

1.2 Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) (plötzlicher Kindstod)

 

  • about 3,000 cases/year in USA
  • mostly between 1-3 months of age

 

2. Motor development

2.1 The dynamic systems view  

  • movement, development of new behavior etc

 

movement = interaction of motivation, perception, and motor skills

  •  children actively modulate and fine-tune assembled motor parts to new tasks
  • development of new behavior depends on …

– development of nervous system – body’s physical properties and possibilities for movement – child’s goal and environmental support

2. Motor development

2.2 Reflexes

 

 

basic reflexes   = built-in automatic and involuntary reactions to specific stimuli 
  • some disappear after few months, others persist into adulthood

2. Motor development

2.3 Gross motor skills (Grobmotorik)

 

  • typical milestones of gross motor development during first year 
  • variability in onset (2-4 months) and in sequence

2. Motor development

2.4 Fine motor skills (Feinmotorik)

 

 

  • development of reaching and grasping up to pincer grip (Pinzettengriff) 
  • importance of perceptual-motor coupling

 

3. Sensory and perceptual development 3.1 Exploring sensory and perceptual development   sensation

=physical stimuli that are registered by sense organs

 

3. Sensory and perceptual development 3.1 Exploring sensory and perceptual development
  • perception

= cognitive interpretation of what is sensed

 

3. Sensory and perceptual development 3.1 Exploring sensory and perceptual development  
  • methods of studying infant´s perception

 

  • visual preference method: studying ability to distinguish two objects with different features by measuring gaze time 
  •  habituation and dishabituation: reaction to repeated or new stimulus
             - measures: looking time, sucking rate, heart       and respiration rate

3. Sensory and perceptual development

3.2 Visual Perception

  • visual acuity (Sehschärfe) and color

 

  • acuity improves to adult level until end of first year 
  • only green and red at birth, all cones (Zapfen) fully developed with 2 months

 

3. Sensory and perceptual development

3.2 Visual Perception

  • perceiving patterns (Mustererkennung)

 

  • preference for patterned vs. plain displays (Fantz, 1963) 
  • preference for faces

 

3. Sensory and perceptual development

3.2 Visual Perception

  • depth perception (Tiefenwahrnehmung)

 

  • visual cliff experiments (Gibson & Walk, 1960), no crossing with 6-12 months
  • first use of binocular depth cues with 3-4 months

3. Sensory and perceptual development

3.3 Hearing

 

 

  • prenatal listening ability in the last 2 months 
  • newborns sensitive to human speech sounds
  •  newborns recognize voice of familiar caregiver
  • improvements in perception of loudness, pitch (Tonhöhe), and localization during first 2 years

 

4. Cognitive development 4.1 Piaget’s theory
  • (adaptation)
  • schemata

  • active construction of internal representation of the world (adaptation)
  • coding in schemes (Schemata) = organized knowledge

 

4. Cognitive development

4.1 Piaget’s theory  

  • assimilation
  • equilibration 

 

  • assimilation and accomodation; organization 
  • equilibration (Äquilibration) to resolve cognitive conflict

4. Cognitive development

4.2 Piaget sensorimotor stage

 

 

  • first stage in Piaget's theory (Sensumotorische Stufe; from birth to 2) 
  •  coordinating sensory experiences with physical, motoric actions

 

4. Cognitive development

4.2 Piaget sensorimotor stage

  • substages

yeah

 

4. Cognitive development

4.2 Piaget sensorimotor stage

  • specific errors

 

  • missing object permanence (until 8 months) 
  • A-not-B-error (until 12 months)

 

4. Cognitive development

4.2 Piaget sensorimotor stage

  • evaluation

 

  • some processes not crucial to reach next stage
  • some processes occur earlier than proposed, e.g. object permanence

4. Cognitive Development

4.3 Learning, remembering, and conzeptualization

  • role of operant conditioning

  • crib-mobile experiments (Rovee-Collier, 1987)

 

4. Cognitive Development

4.3 Learning, remembering, and conzeptualization

  • attention

 

  •  development of focused attention 
  •  importance of joint attention (first with 7, mastered with 11 months)

 

4. Cognitive Development

4.3 Learning, remembering, and conzeptualization

  • imitation

 

  • newborns imitating facial expressions (Meltzoff, 2005)
  •  deferred imitation of specific action (with 9 months)

 

4. Cognitive Development

4.3 Learning, remembering, and conzeptualization

  • memory

 

  • implicit memory for 1.5 to 2 years (for 2-6 month-olds)
  • explicit memory (first with 6 months, then gradually improving)
Alter der Kinder (Monate)    3 6 9 12 Behaltensdauer (Wochen) 1 2 6 12
  • infantile (or childhood) amnesia

 

4. Cognitive Development

4.3 Learning, remembering, and conzeptualization

  • concept formation and categorization

  • forming of conceptual categories (with 7-9 months)

 

5. Language development 5.1 How language develops
  • recognizing language sounds

 

  • universal phoneme detection (up to 6 months)
  •  improvement for own language, loss for others (from 6-12 months)

 

5. Language development 5.1 How language develops
  • stages 

 

  1.  crying (from birth on)
  2.  cooing (1-2 months; Gurren)
  3.  babbling (with 6 months; Lallstadium)
  4.  gestures (with 8-12 months)
  5.  first words spoken(with 10-15, mean 13 months) 

understands about 50 word

6. vocabulary spurt starts (with 13-25, mean 18 months; Benennungsexplosion)

– speaks about 50 words (50-Wort-Marke) – rapid growth of active vocabulary [3.30] 7. two-word utterances (with 18-24 months) [3.31-32] 8. telegraphic speech (short precise word sequences without articles, auxiliary verbs, and other connectives)

5. Language development

5.2 Biological and enviromental influences

biological basis of language acquisition (universal sequence)

 

  • language-acquisition device (LAD; Chomsky, 1957)
  •  language abilities of other primates

 

5. Language development

5.2 Biological and enviromental influences

  • sensitive period
  • language as tool

 

  • sensitive period (cf. „wild children“; „Wolfskinder“)
  • • language as tool
– importance of language as communication tool – interaction view (Tomasello, 2003, 2006), language as a social skill

 

5. Language development

5.2 Biological and enviromental influences

  • influence of parents’ support, e.g. child-directed speech

 

  • recasting (The dog was barking. When was the dog barking?)
  • expanding (Dog bark. Yes, the dog was barking.)
  • labeling (asking to name objects)

 

1. Physical changes 1.1 Body growth
  • increasing height and weight

increasing height and weight

 

1. Physical changes 1.1 Body growth
  • the brain

 

  • prefrontal cortex (planning, organizing, maintaining attention)
  • synaptogenesis and myelination
  • lateralisation

1. Physical changes

1.2 Motor development

 

  • gross motor skills (enjoyment of moving around)
  • fine motor skills (e.g., building block towers) handedness (Händigkeit; right : left = 9 :1)

-  genetic inheritance, in all cultures

– related to other cognitive skills

1. Physical changes

1.3 Nutrition

  • body mass index norms

 

> 85th percentile = risk for overweight > 95th percentile = overweight > 97th percentile = obese (fettleibig)

 

1. Physical changes

1.3 Nutrition

  • overweight

 

  • increasing number in the US
  • related to other health problems (like type-2 diabetes)
  • releated to psychological problems (like lower self-esteem; Selbstwert)