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Chapter 1 Framing Psychological Development Chapter 3 Perception Chapter 4 The Emerge of Action Chapter 5 Cognitive Development Chapter 6 Attachment Chapter 7 Origins of Emotions, Temperament, Personality Chapter 9 The Growth of Knowledge Chapter 12 Morality in Thought and Action Chapter 13 Knowing Ourselves, Knowing Others Chapter 14 Becoming Part of the Family Chapter 15 Becoming Part of the Community (self explanatory, so not much noted here) Lecture specific information added to accompanied chapters.

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Chapter 1 Framing Psychological Development
Periods of development
Prenatal period (conception to birth): Preference for sounds of mother’s language
Infancy (Birth to age 1,5): Preverbal, fear of strangers around 8 months
Preschool period (Age 1,5-4): Language, think about non-present things, memory skills, theory of
mind, social interactions
Young school age (Age 5-7): Social and cognitive skills expand, learn to read, memory and maths
strategies, complex discussion, TV influential
Later school age (Age 8-12): Complex thoughts and problems, sefl-control (delay gratification,
impulses), social network
Adolescence (Age 13-20): Puberty, hypothetical situations, risk taking, thrill, difficulty controlling
impulses, romantic and sexual relationships, independence
Young adulthood (Age 21-30): Consolidation of changes, wildness diminishes, detailed knowledge,
applied skills, career or homemaker
Middle adulthood (Age 31-60): Variety in life expectancy, patterns shape
Late adulthood (Age 60+): Individual variations, experience present, remember past positively

Areas of Development

Perceptual development
 People grow the ability to pick up information by using their senses
 Changes in integration of information and to guide action
 Ability to move in the world changes
 Development of reflexes and consciousness
 Usually shown in young children (crawling, walking, catching etc)
Cognitive development
 Understanding and usage of information
 Developing mental abilities such as memory and attention
Moral development
 Sense of values
 Ethical beliefs
Social development
 Relationships between people
 Attachments
 Bullying
 Romantic relationships
Emotional development
 Range of emotions shaping
 Motivational changes

,Qualitative change: new kind of structure or process emerges that was not present before.
(developmental psychology  stages of development)
Quantitative change: same structures and processes remain but show differences in the magnitude.
(Focus: mental and physical processes and capacities)

Studying psychological development




Chapter 3 Perception
Sensation: stimulation of sense organs
Perception: interpretation of sensations
Colour constancy: Perceiving objects as having same colour under different conditions of
illumination (lightning)
Methods in infant research (above)

Categorical perception: Cluster stimuli that vary along continuum into discrete categories
 Speech:
 lip release  start of consonant
 Voicing: vibration of vocal cord
 Colour perception
 No bands in shades of grey
 Bands in colour
 Language-free system results from maturation, present in infancy
 Language-based system develops during pre-school years, based on experience

, Depth perception (Cue=perceivable entity that is informative about feature of environment e.g.
line)
Dynamic Cues (from 0 months onwards)
 Rely on relative motion of stationary objects against background
 Effective on faraway objects
 Reliable in nature
 Do not require good visual acuity
 Useful in early infancy
Binocular Cues (from 1 to 4 months onward)
 Rely on differences between eyes to estimate distance
 Eyes focus on something close: “schielen”
Pictorial Cues (from 4 to 6 months onward)
 Indicate distance from viewer on two dimensional surface
 Interposition
 Texture gradients
 Convergence in distance
 Perspective illusion

Face perception
Newborns prefers normal faces over scrambled face (elements in face are scrambled e.g. eyes at
bottom, mouth at top)
Newborns do not prefer normal faces over distorted face (distance between elements in face
changes)
Levels of analysis
Proximate: mechanism, development (ex.: how does the brain develop so that a bird can sing?)
Ultimate: function, phylogeny (ex.: why does a bird sing this specific song? Why is this mechanism
favoured in this species?)

Social dominance
Animals: relative size predicts dominance (non-dominant access to resources)
Violation of expectation (method in infant research)




Chapter 4 The emerge of action
Motor development
Each life stage faces different challenges
Fertilized egg
Challenge: Grow healthy body and mind
Skill: Repair mutations
Infant
Challenge: learn to walk, socialize, and more
Skills: Reflexes and learning mechanisms
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