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Psy 201- Chapter 4 Notes

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This is chapter 4 of of the Psy 201 course. These notes consist of notes taken from the book (white) and notes taken in class (red). These notes are thorough, organized, and color-coded. I made an A in the class and 100's or above on all tests, including the final.

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Uploaded on
January 8, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2024/2025
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Jeffery bednark
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4.1; 4.4-4.7
4.1- Humans Develop in Three Key Areas Starting in the Prenatal Period

Developmental Psychology- how humans change over the lifespan, from conception through infancy, childhood, adolescence, and
adulthood.

Nature and nurture both influence these changes in three developmental ways:
● Physical- growth of body, changes in the brain, sensory and motor skills, levels of hormones
● Socio-emotional- how we understand ourselves, interact with others, and experience and regulate emotions
● Cognitive- How our mental processes and ability to think and communicate change over time

Germinal Period:
● Conception - two weeks after
● Zygote divides rapidly and implants into the uterine wall

Embryonic Period:
● Three - eight weeks after conception
● Brain, spine, major organs, and bodily structures begin to form

Fetal Period:
● Nine weeks after conception - birth
● Brain continues developing, body structures are refined
● Fetus grows in length and weight



Physical Changes:

Brain Changes- as infants and children develop, the brain changes in two critical ways
● Neurogenesis
● Neural Pruning
-Over time with experience, the synaptic connections are refined to preserve the most important and helpful connections

● Proper brain development during infancy requires an enriching and stimulating environment with supportive caregivers
● Under stimulated brains will be less able to process complex information, solve problems, or develop advanced language

Inborn Reflexes- babies come into the world hardwired with basic motor reflexes that aid survival
● Rooting reflex
● Sucking reflex
● Grasping reflex

Motor Skills-
● Maturation- physical development of the brain and body that prepares an infant for voluntary movement, such as rolling over
sitting, and walking.
● The fact that not all babies crawl is an example of how nurture also affects maturation

,Sensory Development-
● An infant obtains information from the world by hearing, seeing, smelling, tasting, and perceiving
● Some of these sensory abilities are more fully developed at birth than others
-newborns prefer sweet tastes
-newborns can hear very well
-newborns have poor vision



4.4- Infants and Children Change Socially and Emotionally

Attachment- an enduring emotional connection that can motivate care, protection, and social support.

Infants have a fundamental need to emotionally bond with those that care for them- early attachment

Early Attachment Experiments- during the late 1950's, psychologists generally believed that the care an infant needed was based
primarily on getting food from the mother
● Harlow monkey attachment experiment changed his belief- they stayed with the comfort mother about 80% of the time; only
left to get food
● Infants need physical closeness with and comfort from caregivers to develop socio-emotionally

Separation Anxiety- when babies cannot see their attachment figures or are left with babysitters or strangers they don't know, they
often show signs of distress



● Secure Attachment- infants that are comfortable enough to play in an unfamiliar environment as long as the caregiver is prese
and who are readily comforted by the return of the caregiver
-related to better socioemotional functioning in childhood, better peer relations, and successful adjustment at school
● Avoidant Attachment- infants who do not look at the caregiver when they leave or return and who play happily with the
stranger in the caregiver's absence
-no trust to the caregivers, don’t find comfort in them
● Ambivalent Attachment- infants who seem to have mixed feelings about the caregiver- they cry when the caregiver leaves th
room, but they both seek out and reject the caregiver when they return

Avoidant and Ambivalent are the two insecure attachments.



4.5- Infants and Children Change Cognitively

Assimilation- the process we use to incorporate new information into existing schemas
Accommodation- the process we use to create new schemas or drastically alter existing schemas to incorporate new information that
would otherwise not fit it

Piaget's Four Stages to Cognitive Development:

Schemas:
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University of Mississippi Course Notes

Notes from different courses at the University of Mississippi. Individual chapters as well as package deals. Straight A student with a 4.0 GPA.

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