Front Back
Ch 5 cephalocaudal pattern
Growth Starts at head and downward backward direction.
Ch 5 Proxmiodistal Pattern
Growth, center and moves outward direction.
Ch 5 skeletal age
A measure of estimating physical maturity
Ch 5 Plasticity
Ability of brain to recover from brain damage
Ch5 Gross motor Skills
Large muscles: Arms, legs, trunk Sequence follow cephalocaudal pattern: Head- avg 6wks, range 3wks-4mos Chest- avg 2mos, range-3wks-4mos roll over- avg 4 mos, range 2-7mos sit up- avg 7 mos, range 5-9mos Crawl- avg 7 mos, range 5-11mos Pull to a stand, avg 8mos range 5-12mos Wal…
Ch 5 Fine Motor Skills developmental progression of grasping behavior.
Hands, Fingers Follows proxmialdistal pattern: Pre-reaching-birth- 3mos visually guided reaching- 3mos Ulnar Grasping- 3-4mos transfer objects- 4-5mos pincer grip- 9-12 mos
Ch 5 Sutures
Places where pieces of skull fuse togther
Ch 5 Fontanelles When do they close
Soft spots of the skull Back close first (mos), fronts close last (2years).
Ch 5 Skeletal Age assessed
looking at bone growth gender differences in boys/girls. girls ahead in maturity. Racial diff- Af. Am. ahead
Ch 5 When do teeth appear? what age are all teecth there? how many? what happens if they get them early?
1st tooth- 6mos caucasions 1st tooth- Af Am. 4mos by age 2 20 primary teeth
Ch 5 developmental patterns are evident in brain plasticity and lateralization?
Older you get lateralization increases, the more the brain is specialzed. Negative realtionship b/w lateralization and plasticity, harder to recover from injury at old age.
Ch5 Bottle feeding and Breast Feeding
Breast feeding- nutrition, specific nutrients to grow. 1st 6mos recommeneded.
Ch 5 marasmus. What causes it?
1st year when baby is born. Lacking in all nutrients and in danger of dying. , wasting away, body fat used up.
Ch 5 kwashiorkor what causes it.
1-3yrs of berth. not enough protein in diet bloded abs, hair loss, rashes, swollen feet. .
Ch 5 Nonorganic failure to thrive Causes
Symptoms simliar to Marasmus (lack of nutrients, bused up body fat) Lack of affection, if placed in loving environment they will cathc up.
Ch 5 development of visual acuity and depth perception.
6mos vision is 20/20 visual cliff perception Motion cues- birth, moving objects binocular vision-2-3mos use both eyes monocular/pictorial cues- 6/7mos. RR tracks, parallel lines
Ch 6 Scheme
refer to how we organize information, changes with each stage of cognitive development.
Ch 6 assimliation
incorporate new information
Ch 6 Acomodation
Change way we think
Ch 6 circular reaction
voluntary act or reflex generating repitition
Ch 6 recognition memory
3 mos- recognize soneone within 1 week 6-mos 2 weeks 1year- several weeks
Ch 6 recall memory
memory without prompt or cue 1 year- one month 2yrs- three months
Ch 6 Working memory
short term, consciousness, infor onnly stores for 30 seconds.
Ch 6 Common errors: Over extention Under extention
word that is used more than it should. "kitty" is my cat, and no other.
ch 6 Long term memory
memory that is stored and learned, more permanent knowledge based. highly organized.
Ch 6 Piaget's sensorimotor stage 6 substages
1. Reflexive schemes- knowledge based on reflex 2. primary circular reactions- pleasurable experiences, body moevements 3. Seconday circular reactions- involves objects in the environment, "mobile" 4. Coordination of seconday circular reactions- goal directed behavior. AB search Error,…
Ch 6 habituation and dishabituation
Habituation- reduce strength in response to a stimulus. doesnt pay attention Dishabituation- renewed interest, looks away and then looks again
Ch 6 Object permanence
objects continue to exist even when they are no longer visible evident at 3 1/2 mos.
ch 6 Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory
Learning and cognitive devleopment take place in social context. Zone of proximal devlopment low limit- what one can do independently upper limit- what a person can do with assistance
ch 6 Infant intelligence tests
developmental scales based on perceptional and motor skills. Dq score - devleopmental quotient. measues language,motor, perception. DOES NOT PREDICT LATER IQ Nancy baley scale- (cognitive scale) language scale- sounds they make motor- see what baby cna physically do social/emotion-…
Ch 6 Good predictors of later intellectual functioning
Fagan Test of infant intelligence looks at habituation and dishabituation.
Ch 6 Current day care in U.S
quality varies greatly, determines how it affects development only 20-25% offer +learning environment
Ch 6 the sequence of language development in infancy
Cooing- soft vowel sounds babbling- consenents/vowels joint attention- you look at cup, baby looks at cup Tune into cultural language- deaf babies no noise after 6mos Receptive Vocabulary- certain words, names, precedes spraking First word-12mos halophrases- one word phrases teleg…
Ch 6 3 theories about language development.
Skinner- Behaviorist- operant conditioning, reinforcement Nativist- Chomsky- L.A.D Language Aquisition Device, decode phonological rules, what goes together. (cooing and babbling) Interactionist- interactions between inner capactities and environmental influences
Ch 7 Separation Anxiety
Mom leaves room, object permanence. thinks about mother when she is not there
Ch 7 Stranger Anxiety
exposed to people who are unfamiliar to them. appears around 6mos
Ch 7 social refrencing
Look to another before they react. if moms upset, babies upset if moms happy, babies happy
ch 7 Symbiosis
infants state of "oneness". with mom doenst know its separate
Ch 7 temperment
early and stable indiviual differences in reactivity and self regulation.
Ch 7 Erikson's trust vs mstrust and automomy and shame/doubt
trust- needs are met, food, attentions, diaper. mistrust outwighs trust- under neglect Autonomy- walk, talk, toliet, build autonomy shame/self doubt outweighs autonomy is too strict on toilet training
Ch 7 Margaret Mahler’s theory of separation-individuation
Separation- crawls away, leads to realization that one's separate individuation- develops sense of self. know you're diff from other people. separation precedes individuation
Ch7 emotion self-regulation. and strategies
refers to the strategies we use to adjust our emotional state to a comfortable level where we can accomplish our goals. Strategies: turn away stimuli: something scary on tv, the child turns away. approach and withdraw. stranger-withdraw someone they know-appraoch sucking- stressful…
Ch7 Thomas and Chess categories of Infant temperament (DART IQ AAA)
Distracability- puppet during crying Activity level- active periods to inactive periods rhythmicity- regularity of body functions, sleep, hunger, all same time Threshold of responsiveness- how much stimulation is required to get a response. Intensity of Reaction- energy level of respo…
Ch7 goodness-of-fit model.
how temperment and environment can produce favorable outcome
Ch 7 Ethological theory on attachemnt PACR
recognizes the infants emotional tie to the caregiver 4 phases Pre-attachment- grasping,smiling,crying. Attachment in the making- respond diff to a caregiver rather than stranger Clear cut- attachment to caregiver is evident, separation anxiety formation of a ricipricol relationship-…
ch 7 Mary Ainsworth’s attachment patterns SARD
Secure attachment- mom used as secure base avoident attachment- unresponsive to mom when she is present. fail to cling at reunion Resistant attachment- closeness to mom, fail to explore, angry resistant behavior at reunion Disorganized attachment- confused, contradictory behaviors
Ch7 facotrs that affect attachment security
oppt. to est a close relationship quality of caregiving baby's characteristics parents internal working models
psychoanalytical attachment
mom feeding child forms a bond between the two
behavioral attachment
feeding is important but also is comfort....Monkey experiment

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