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Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years
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Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Dec 29, 2015

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Fay Carroll
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Page 1: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Psychology Over the Lifespan

From conception to the elder years

Page 2: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

In the Beginning

• Gametes are sex cells (sperm and egg) and each contain 23 chromosomes.

• Sperm penetrates the egg and its genetic material is melded with the ovum (egg).

• In the egg, one chromosome is a X (female) and in the sperm, either X or Y.

– Sperm determine sex!

Page 3: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Sex: Chromosomes

• XX: Female

• XY: Male

Page 4: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.
Page 5: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

What happens next?

• The fertilized egg becomes a zygote– A zygote has 46 chromosomes (in pairs);

one member in each pair coming from the egg or sperm.

• Chromosomes are made of DNA; each of its “rungs” are formed by the bond between pairs of chemicals. Genes make up these “rungs.”

Page 6: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.
Page 7: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Gene Dominance

When a person possesses differing genes for the same

trait, one is often dominant over the other

Next image: Copyright Allyn & Bacon, 2003

Page 8: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.
Page 9: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

ZygoteBlastocyst

• Next, the zygote begins to divide, and the production of certain hormones causes genes to turn on and off in a specific sequence, guiding development.

• Within 3 days, a cluster of 60-70 cells has formed a blastocyst. This rolls into a tube and proceeds through an orderly procession of stages.

• Cell images copyright Allyn & Bacon, 2003

Page 10: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

First Division

Second Division

Page 11: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Fetal Development

Page 12: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

EmbryoFetus

• An embryo is formed (from the blastocyst) within 2 weeks. All major axes of the body are present.

• A fetus is formed within 8 weeks. All major body structures are evident.

• Pregnancy is divided into 3 month intervals called trimesters.

Page 13: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Fetal Development

Blastocyst

Page 14: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Pregnancy

• By the end of the second trimester, the great bulk of the neurons are in place.

• 50% of all fertilized eggs contain some kind of abnormality. Most of these are spontaneously aborted.

• 1/250 babies are born with an evident abnormality.

Page 15: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

The Fetus

• The fetus is active from the start! Males are more active than females.

• 20-25 weeks: sensitive to light and sound

• 28 weeks: Responds to outside stimulation

• 25-34 weeks: Can detect human speech

Page 16: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Teratogens: When the environment hurts

• Chicken pox or rubella: disrupts brain development

• Alcohol: Affects throughout pregnancy. Fetal alcohol syndrome.

• Heroin/cocaine: Physical defects, sleep problems, irritability & attentional problems

• Smoking: Miscarriage, lower birth weights, smaller heads, SIDS, stillbirth

Page 17: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Terotogens (continued)

• Caffeine (3 + cups coffee): Miscarriage, lower birth rate, irritability

• Lack of folic acid: Spina Bifida

• Pollutants: Birth defects, cancer, behavioral problems

• Excessive maternal stress: Attentional problems, anxiety

Page 18: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

The Newborn: A Work in Progress

• The newborn has:– Sensory capacities (smell, hear range of

sounds)– Reflexes (e.g. rooting)– Temperament

• 14-21 months: inhibited baby/narrow face• Touching premature infants helps with growth

and development (50% faster growth in one study)

Page 19: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

On Development

• All races/cultures pass through this orderly progression. Growth occurs in small spurts, and control over body comes in phases. By age 2 child has good control over limbs. Fine motor control comes later.

Following 2 slides: Copyright Allyn & Bacon, 2003

Page 20: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Developmental Milestones

Page 21: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

(Data from Thomas, et al., 1970)

Temperament

Characteristic ways of responding to the environment that vary from infant to infant

(Data from Thomas, et al., 1970)

Page 22: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

The Child

• Piaget (1896-1980): He was a Swiss psychologist that studied children’s thinking and reasoning. He developed two central concepts:– Assimilation: The child uses existing schemas

(mental structures that organize input) to take in new things and respond accordingly

– Accommodation: Changing schemas to cope with a broader range of situations.

Page 23: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Piaget: 4 Stages of Development

• Sensorimotor (0-2 years)

• Preoperations (2-7 years)

• Concrete Operations (7-12 years)

• Formal Operations (12 and up)

Following 4 slides: copyright Allyn & Bacon, 2003

Page 24: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Sensorimotor

•Understand the world through senses and motor actions

•Develop object permanence at stage end

•At 9 months, can imitate

Page 25: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Preoperative

•Think about things not present

•Fantasy play

•Thinking egocentric, dominated by perception

Page 26: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Concrete Operations

• Can manipulate ideas

• Understand reversibility

• Can do conservation and classification

Page 27: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Formal Operations

•Can do abstract & hypothetical reasoning

•Can reason contrary to experience

•MAY be found only in people's areas of expertise!

Page 28: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Adolescence

• Begins with puberty: Hormones cause sex organs to mature and secondary sexual characteristics to appear.

Page 29: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Copyright Allyn & Bacon, 2003

Page 30: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Adolescence

• Uneven growth patterns leads to awkward look; Rapid growth of hands, feet, and legs is followed by growth in the torso.

Page 31: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Adolescence

• Girls typically stop growing at age 13, boys age 16.

• Abstract thinking: Now can understand higher mathematics, politics, relationships. Brain continues growing.

Following slide: Copyright Allyn & Bacon, 2003

Page 32: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Growth

Page 33: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Adolesence

• Three characteristics

–Personal Fable

–The Imaginary Audience

–Peer Influence

Following 5 slides: copyright Allyn & Bacon, 2003

Page 34: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Personal Fable

Adolescents assume their thoughts and feelings are unique (no one has ever loved so deeply, etc.)

Page 35: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Personal Fable: Its Risky

Adolescents tend to engage in risky behavior they would never do as adults.

Page 36: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

The Imaginary Audience

The strong focus on self leads adolescents to feel that everyone else is focused on them as well.

Page 37: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Early Maturing Boys

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Late Maturing Boys

Page 39: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Early Maturing Girls

Page 40: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Late Maturing Girls

Page 41: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Adolescence• Conflict with parents: Most frequent early on, but

intensity peaks in late adolescence. Most often between mothers and daughters in early adolescence.

• Mood swings

• Prone to taking risks: Peaks in late adolescence.

Page 42: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Adolescence

• Many adolescents do not have these problems. Problems may be triggered by the environment.

Page 43: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Parents and Teens

• Kids value parents' advice more than peers on life goals, religion, politics, morality, use of hard drugs

• Peers more valued on questions of sex, music, styles, use of alcohol

• Kids share parents' views concerning personal values

• Parental influence highest where there is a good parent-child relationship

(Allyn & Bacon, 2003)

Page 44: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Aging

• Problematic changes from the environment– Lack of nutrition– Lack of exercise– Lack of meaningful activities

• Sexual changes.– Women: Menopause (44-55yrs)– Men: declining strength/energy can affect

sexual performance.

Page 45: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Aging

• By age 50, some decline in cognitive abilities (perhaps disturbed neurotransmitter function or degrading white matter).

• More than 50% 65+ has cataracts.– Narrowing of pupil makes light/dark contrast

hard.

Page 46: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Aging

• Past age 50, lose ability to hear high frequency sounds.

• Smell declines after middle 50s.

What about memory?

Page 47: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Aging

• Semantic memory (facts, words, meanings) and new episodic memories (specific events) remains intact.

• Decline in working memory(short-term) due to frontal lobe impairment.

Page 48: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Aging

• Fluid and crystallized intelligence until mid-50s and in the early 70s both decline.– Fluid intelligence: Flexibility in reasoning– Crystallized: Facts, vocabulary

Page 49: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Aging

• The good stuff:

– Wisdom– More emotional stability– Socioemotional selectivity theory– Cerebral reserve hypothesis

• Compensation for declining abilities

Page 50: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Lets look at a lifelong developmental model

Page 51: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Erickson’s Psychosocial Development

• Basic Trust vs. Mistrust (0-1yrs): Infants either develop a basic trust that the world is good or fail to do so.

• Autonomy vs. doubt (1-3 yrs): The child either is allowed to make independent decisions or made to feel ashamed/self-doubt for wanting to do so.

Page 52: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Erikson

• Initiative vs. Guilt (3-6 years): Develop a sense of purpose or direction, or is overly controlled by parents and made to feel constrained or guilty.

• Industry vs. Inferiority (6-11yrs): Develop competence and ability to work with others, or feel inferior and incompetent

Page 53: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Erikson

• Identity vs. role confusion (adolescence): Either successfully grapples w/questions of identity and future roles or becomes confused.

• Intimacy vs. Isolation (young adult): Develops deep, intimate relations or is socially isolated

Page 54: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

Erikson

• Generativity vs. Self-absorption (middle adulthood): Look toward the future and determine what to leave as legacy; failing to do so leads to meaninglessness

• Integrity vs. Despair (old age): Reflect back and think life was worthwhile or feels despair and fears death.

Page 55: Psychology Over the Lifespan From conception to the elder years.

End of Developmental