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King Psammetichus II
Children raised by shepherd w/tongue cut out. First thing they say is Bekos - Frigian word for bread.
Aristotle
influence nature/nurture all knowledge comes from experience. child-rearing should adjust to needs of child
Plato
born with innate knowledge (nature) strict discipline and self-control across the board
John Locke
Enlightenment Period Tabula Rasa nurture component early strict parenting
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Englightenment Period emphasized nature child learns via spontaneous interactions with objects and people, not instruction
Charles Darwin
"Biographical Sketch of an Infant" diary of his own child's development
Freud
our unconscious biological drives influence development criticisms overemphasis of sexuality did not study children directly
John Watson
behaviorism all behavior can be explained by history of rewards & punishments over lifetime. associative learning associate positive and negative feelings with different events nurture can overcome nature
Jean Piaget
founded the field of cognitive development provided one of the broadest theories ever to account for changes in children's thinking.
continuity vs. discontinuity
continuity: quantitative change discontinuity: qualitative change (pine tree vs. caterpillar/butterfly) humans- depends how you look at it. continuous over course of childhood, but appears discontinuous b/c of growth spurts
reliability
interrater- the amount of agreement in the observations of different raters who witness the same behavior test-retest- attained when measures of performance are similar on 2 or more occasions
interviews
structured- all asked same q's clinical- questions adjusted in accord with answers provided limitations - younger children can't talk, children may lie, questions and answers can be biased
observations
naturalistic- describe how children behave in their usual environments limitations: lack of control, don't know what causes what, target behavior might not be observed during session structured- present identical situation to all children and record each's behavior limitations: does no…
cross sectional design
children of different ages are compared on a given behavior/characteristic over a short period of time limitations: doesn't allow you to see patterns of developmental change only seeing small sliver
longitudinal design
same children studied twice or more over a substantial period of time limitations over time will lose participants biased rehearsal effects
cell development
division migration differentiation selective cell death
zygote
germinal phase conception - 2 weeks hollow sphere of cells with a bulge, the inner cell mass, on one side (this forms into embryo)
embryo
embryonic phase (3rd-8th week) neural tube - U shaped groove (becomes brain & spinal chord) placenta- permits exchange of materials b/w the bloodstream of the fetus and mother umbilical chord- tube that contains the blood vessels that travel from the placenta to the developing organism…
cephalocaudal development
head area develops before feet
fetus
fetal stage (9th week-birth) placental membrane protects from some toxins amniotic sac filled with fluid and fetus floats in as a protective buffer
polyhydramnios
too much amniotic fluid
glial cells
form myelin sheath guide migration of neurons remove dead neurons
neurogenesis
creation of neurons via cell division
Thalidomide
removed nausea from pregnancy affected development of limbs of babies
nutraceuticals
"anti-teratogens" (folic acid)
fMRI
how much oxygen in different areas of brain
EEG
electrical activity stimulated by neurons hard to find what neurons firing good at measuring speed of firing
PET
injecting radioactive substance into bloodstream and see how quickly brain metabolizes it
NIRS
shine infrared light through skull and measure how much reflected back to the device
haploid cells
sex cells produced through meiosis
meiotic errors
instead of splitting in first stage, chromosome stays together, so there double amount. causes there to be 1 too many chromosomes on the pair (trisomy 21)
lipodystrophy
makes child look old
norm of reaction
all the phenotypes that could theoretically result from a given genotype
MAOA
the warrior gene inhibits release of brain chemicals associated with aggression expressed in children raised in certain environments (stress, maltreatment)
regulator genes
control continuous switching on/off of genes that underlie development across the lifespan affected by epigenetics
shared environment effects
degree of similarity among biologically unrelated siblings
nonshared environmental effects
effects of environment unique to the individual (birth order, parents behavior, isolated trauma)
instrumental conditioning
aka operant conditioning learning relationship between one's own behavior and the consequences of that result

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