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Summary Developmental Psychology chapter 1-16

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This is a summary of the book 'Life Span, Human Development, 9th edition' by Sigelman & Rider. It covers chapters 1-16.

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H1-h16
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Psychology Summary
Chapter 1
3 domains
1. Physical development
2. Cognitive development (perception, language, learning, memory,
problem solving)
3. Psychosocial development (motives, emotions, personality traits,
interpersonal skills etc.)
1.1 How should we think about development?
 Biological aging  deterioration of organisms
 Emerging adulthood  between adolescence & full adulthood. 18-
25. WW2  educational period
 Age grade  different socially defined age groups in a society
 Rite of passage  ritual for passage from one status to another
(childhood  adulthood)
 Age norms  expectations; society’s way of telling people how to
act their age
 Social clock  a person’s sense of when things should be done and
when he/she is ahead or behind the schedule dictated by age norms
 Socioeconomic status (SES)
 Nature  hereditary / genes, maturation
 Nurture  environment, learning, experience Nature affect
Nurture

1.2 What is the science of life-span development?
 Goals of driving the study of life-span development: Describing,
Predicting, Explaining & optimizing
 Baby biographies
 Developmental psychology  G. Stanley Hall.  research tool;
questionnaire
 influential book ‘Adolescence’ (1904) inspired by Darwin’s
evolutionary theory. Emotional ups & downs + rapid changes 
period called Storm & stress.
 Gerontology  study of aging & old age
 Life-span perspective: 7 key assumptions (Baltes)
1. Development is a lifelong process
2. Development is multidirectional
3. Development involves both gain and loss
4. Development is characterized by lifelong plasticity
5. Development is shaped by its historical-cultural context
6. Development is multiply influenced (interaction)
7. Development must be studied by multiple disciplines

,1.3 How is development studied?
 The scientific method  method & attitude
 A good theory should be
o Internally consistent
o Falsifiable
o Supported by data

Naturalistic observations  observing people
in their everyday surroundings
Structured observations  create special
stimuli, tasks, or situations designed to elicit
the behaviour of interest
Case study  in-depth examination of
individual; compiling & analysing information
from a variety of sources such as
observations, testing & interviewing people
who know them

 Directionality problem (in correlational
studies)  the direction of cause-effect
relationship could be reverse
 Video deficit in infants  difficulty
learning as much from video
presentations as they do from face-to-
face presentations. Need to perceive a
social partner who is personally talking
with them in order to learn.
 Cross-sectional studies  how different cohorts (like ages) differ
 Longitudinal design  one cohort of individuals is assessed
repeatedly over time
 Time-of-measurement effects  effects of historical events and
trends occurring when data are being collected
 Sequential design  combines cross-sectional & longitudinal
approach in single study

1.4 What special challenges do developmental scientists
face?
 WEIRD people  living in societies that are Western, Educated,
Industrialized, Rich & Democratic.
 Ethnocentrism  the belief that one’s own group and its culture are
superior




Chapter 2
2.1 Developmental theories and the issues they raise
 Nature-Nurture

,  Activity-Passivity  focusses on the extent to which human beings
are active in creating & influencing their own environments and, in
the process, in producing their own development, or are passively
shaped by forces beyond their control.
 Continuity-Discontinuity  whether the changes people undergo
over their life-span are gradual or abrupt.
o Continuity  small steps, without sudden changes
o Discontinuity  development more as a series of stair steps
each which elevates the individual to a new level of
functioning developmental stages.
Changes are quantitative or qualitative
o Quantitative  in degree  continuity
o Qualitative  in kind  discontinuity
 Universality-context specificity  the extent to which
developmental changes are common to all humans (universal) or
different across cultures, subcultures, task contexts & individuals
(context specific)

2.2 Psychoanalytic Theory
Freud  psychoanalytic theory  focused on the development &
dynamics of the personality
 Notion that humans have basic biological urges or drives that must
be satisfied.
 Newborn  instincts that motivate behaviour  source of psychic
energy that fuels human behaviour
 Strongly believed in unconscious motivation  power of instincts
and other inner forces to influence our behaviour without our
awareness.
 Freud’s theory tilts toward the nature side: development is shaped
by biological forces that provide an unconscious motivation for
behaviour.
 His theory also includes environmental influences on development;
experiences in family during first 5 years of life
 3 components of personality as child develops:
o Id  impulsive, irrational, selfish part of personality whose
mission is to satisfy the instincts.
o Ego  rational side, tries to find realistic ways of gratifying
instincts. Emerges during infancy, takes form of cognitive
processes (perception, learning, problem solving)
o Superego  individual’s internalized moral standards. 3- to
6-y-o children internalize moral standards/values of parents

,  Libido  psychic energy of sex instinct. Shifts from one part of the
body to another as the child matures,
seeking to gratify different biological
needs.
 5 psychosexual stages: Oral, Anal,
Phallic, Latency & Genital.
 Fixation  arrested development in
which part of the libido remains tied to
an earlier stage of development 
might become “stuck” in a stage
 Oedipus complex  boy loves mother
 Electra complex  girl desires father.
Both complexes resolved by
identification.
 Defense mechanisms as unconscious
coping devices
o Repression  removing unacceptable thoughts or traumatic
memories from consciousness
o Regression  retreating to an earlier, less traumatic stage of
development

Erikson:
 Placed less emphasis on sexual urges as drivers of development.
More emphasis on social influences.
 Nature/nurture equally important
 Less emphasis on id. More on rational ego & adaptive powers
 More positive view of human nature. People active in development.
 More emphasis on development after adolescence
 Eight major psychosocial stages
o Trust vs. mistrust  infants
learn to trust other people if
their caregivers are responsive
to needs.
o Autonomy vs. shame and
doubt (1-3y)  assert that
they have wills of their own
o Initiative vs. guilt (3-6y)
develop a sense of purpose by
devising bold plans and talking
prite in accomplishing goals
they set.
o Industry vs. inferiority (6-12y) children must master
important cognitive/social/academic skills and keep up with
their peers; otherwise, they will feel inferior. More social
comparison.
o Identity vs. role confusion (12-20y): ask who they are,
establish social identities otherwise confused about roles they
should play as adults

, o Intimacy vs. isolation (20-40y): seek to form shared
identity, may fear intimacy, experience loneliness/isolation
o Generativity vs. stagnation (40-65y): must feel they are
producing something that will outlive them, otherwise
stagnant/self-centered. Care bout welfare of future
generations.
o Integrity vs. despair (65+y): view lives as meaningful, face
death without worries and regrets.
Children who successfully master each of these conflicts gain
new ego strengths.




2.3 Learning theories
Watson  nurture is everything, nature counts for
nothing
 Behaviourism  rested on belief that
conclusions about human development and
functioning should be based on observations
of overt behaviour rather than speculations
about unobservable cognitive processes
 Classical conditioning

Skinner  research with animals.
 Operant conditioning
o Positive reinforcement; adding a pleasant stimulus
o Negative reinforcement; withdrawing an unpleasant stimulus
o Positive punishment; adding an unpleasant stimulus
o Negative punishment; withdrawing a pleasant stimulus
 Believed, like Watson, that the course of human development
depends on the individual’s learning experiences.

Bandura
 Social cognitive theory (social learning theory)  humans are
cognitive beings whose active processing of information plays a
critical role in their learning, behaviour and development.
 Prefers social cognitive theory rather than learning theory  to
distance himself from learning theories like Watson’s & Skinner’s.
Emphasize his theory is about the motivating & self-regulating role
of cognition in human behaviour.
 Observational learning
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