Lifespan Development Psychology
Lifespan Development - Psychology
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Lifespan Development Psychology - Leaderboard
Lifespan Development Psychology - Details
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5000 years | How long did it take to increase life expectancy from 18 to 41 years of age? |
Influences that are similar for indiviauls in a particular age group (walking and talking at a certain age) | Normative age-graded influences |
Influences that are common to people of a particular generation because of historical circumstances (war, pandemic etc) | Normative history-graded influences |
Unusual occurrences that have a major impact on an individuals life (Rape, abuse, car accident etc) | Nonnormative life events |
Refers to the group of people with similar occupational, educational, and economic characteristics | Socioeconomic status (SES) |
Characteristic: Good intellectual functioning. Appealing, sociablie, easygoing disposition. Self-confidence, high self-esteem. Talents. Faith | Source: Individual |
Characteristic: Bonds to caring adults outside the family. Connection to positive organisations. Attending effective schools. | Source: Extrafamilial Context |
Explores links between development, cognitive processes, and the brain | Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience |
Exmaines connections between socioemotional processes, development and the brain | Developmental Social Neuroscience |
Conception to Birth | Prenatal Period |
Birth to 18-24 months | Infancy |
3-5 Years | Early Childhood |
6 to 10/11 Years | Middle and late Childhood |
10-12 to 18-21 years | Adolescence |
20s and 30s | Early Adulthood |
40s and 50s | Middle Adulthood |
60+ | Late Adulthood |
Childhood and Adolescence | First Age |
Prime adulthood, ages 20 through 59 | Second Age |
Approximately 60 to 79 years of age | Third Age |
Approximately 80+ | Fourth Age |
K. Warner Shaie (2016) recently described three different developmental patterns that provide a portrait of how aging can involve individual variations | Three developmental Patterns of Aging |
Debate about whether development is primarily influenced by nature or nurture. Nature refers to an organism's biological inheritance, nurture to its environmental experiences | Nature-Nurture Issue |
Debate about whether we become older renditions of our early experience or whether we develop into someone different from who we were at an earlier point in development | Stability-Change issue |
Debate about the extent to which development involves gradual, cumulative change or distinct stages | Continuity-Discontinuity Issue |
An interrelated, coherent set of ideas that helps to explain phenomena and facilitate predictions | Theory |
Birth to 1.5 years: Infant's pleasure centres on the mouth | Freud: Oral Stage |
1.5 to 3 years: Child's pleasure focuses on the anus | Freud: Anal Stage |
3 to 6 years: Child's pleasure focuses on the genitals | Freud: Phallic Stage |
6 Years to puberty: Child represses sexual interest and develops social and intellectual skills | Freud: Latency Stage |
Puberty + : A time of sexual reawakening; source of sexual pleasure becomes someone outside the family | Freud: Genital Stage |
Trust vs Mistrust | Erikson: Infancy, first year |
Autonomy Vs Shame & Doubt | Erikson: Infancy 1-3 years |
Initiative Vs Guilt | Erikson: Early childhood (Preschool, 3-5) |
Industry Vs Inferiority | Erikson: Middle and late childhood (6 years to puberty) |
Identity Vs Identity Confusion | Erikson: Adolescence 10-20years |
Intimacy Vs Isolation | Erkison: Early Adulthood 20s and 30s |
Generativity Vs Stagnation | Erikson: Middle adulthood 40s and 50s` |
Integrity Vs Despair | Erikson: Late adulthood |
Theory stating that children actively construct their understanding of the world and go through four stages of cognitive development | Piaget's Theory |
A sociocultural cognitive theory that emphasizes how culture and social interaction guide cognitive development | Vgotsky's Theory |
The child can now reason logically about conrete events and classify objects into different sets | Piaget: Concret Operational Stage |
The adolescent reasons in more abstract, idealistic, and logical ways | Piaget: Formal Operational Stage |
The view of psychologists who emphasize the behaviour, environment and cognition as the key factors in development. | Social Cognitive Theory |
Focuses on five environmental stems: Microsystems, mesosystem, exosystem, macrosystem and chronosystem. | Brofenbrenner's Ecological Theory |
An orientation that does not follow any one theoretical appropach but rather selects from each theory whatever is considered the best | Eclectic Theoretical Orientation |
Studies that involve observing behaviour in real-world settings | Naturalistic Observation |
An indepth look at a single individual | Case Study |
Studies designed to observe and record behaviour | Descriptive research |
Research that attempts to determine the strength of the relationship between two or more events or characteristics | Correlational Research |
A number based on statistical analysis that is used to describe the degree of association between two variables | Correlation coefficient |
A research strategy in which individuals of different ages are compared at one time | Cross-sectional Approach |
A research strategy in which the same individuals ate studied over a period of time, usually several years or more | Longitudinal Approach |
Effects due to a person's time of birth, era, or generation rather than the person's actual age | Cohort Effects |
First generation to come of age and enter emerging adulthood in the twenty-first century. Two main characteristics: 1) connection to technology 2) ethnic diversity | Millennials - Born 1980+ |
Described as lacking an identity and savvy loners | Generation X - Born between 1965 - 1980 |
Label used because this generation represents the spike in the number of babies born after WW2; the largest generation ever to enter late adulthood in the USA | Baby Boomers - Born between 1946 - 1964 |
Children of the great depression and WW2; described as conformists and civic minded | Silent Generation - Born between 1928-1945 |
Fast an inexpensive. Can reveal age-related change | Cross Sectional Design ADVANTAGES |
Reveals nothing about individual change over time as each participant test once. Cohort Effects -> age related change may be due to effect, not simply age | Cross Sectional Design DISADVANTAGES |
Demonstrate sequence of change. Show individual change or consistency. Avoid Cohort Problem | Longitudinal ADVANTAGES |