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Infancy Cognitive Development  “Baby Human – Face Recognition” 2 key ideas from birth: •Born with more neurons than an adult - “Pruning” •Hyperattentive - Pay attention to everything (usually considered an inability to focus) Infancy and Childhood: Cognitive Development  Schema  a concept or framework that organizes and interprets information  Assimilation  interpreting one’s new experience in terms of one’s existing schemas  Accommodation  adapting one’s current understandings (schemas) to incorporate new information Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development Typical Age Range Description of Stage Developmental Phenomena Birth to nearly 2 years Sensorimotor Experiencing the world through senses and actions (looking, touching, mouthing) •Object permanence •Stranger anxiety About 2 to 6 years Preoperational Representing things with words and images but lacking logical reasoning •Pretend play •Egocentrism •Language development About 7 to 11 years Concrete operational •Conservation Thinking logically about concrete •Mathematical events; grasping concrete analogies transformations and performing arithmetical operations About 12 through adulthood Formal operational Abstract reasoning •Abstract logic •Potential for moral reasoning Cognitive Development: Sensorimotor Stage  Object Permanence  the awareness that things continue to exist even when not perceived  No object permanence  A-not-B Error Cognitive Development: Sensorimotor Stage  Circular Reactions  Primary – baby accidentally does something and repeats simply because it feels good  Saliva bubbles, waving arms  Secondary – similar to primary, but involve objects in the environment  Example  Tertiary – infant devises new ways to act on objects to produce interesting results. Infancy and Childhood: Cognitive Development  Baby Mathematics  Shown a numerically impossible outcome, infants stare longer (Wynn, 1992) 4. Possible outcome: Screen drops, revealing one object. 1. Objects placed in case. 2. Screen comes 3. Object is removed. up. 4. Impossible outcome: Screen drops, revealing two objects. Infancy and Childhood: Cognitive Development  Scale Error in the Judy DeLoache Study  Found 18 – 30 month olds commonly make  Scale Errors Infancy and Childhood: Cognitive Development  Scale Error  Typical scale error ages Cognitive Development  Self-Awareness – shopping cart study  Animism – belief that inanimate objects have lifelike qualities and mental lives.  Preoperational  Seriation – Ability to arrange objects in ascending or descending order based on characteristic like length or weight  Concrete operations  Much later than people think Infancy and Childhood: Cognitive Development  Conservation  the principle that properties such as mass, volume, and number remain the same despite changes in the forms of objects  Preoperational vs. Concrete operational  Number, Mass, Length, Volume, Area, Weight Infancy and Childhood: Cognitive Development  Egocentrism  the inability of the preoperational child to take another’s point of view  Example in Child’s answers: Why does the sun shine? To keep me warm. Why is there snow? For me to play in. Why is the grass green? Its my favorite color. Have a 4 year old close her eyes and ask her if you can still see her. Her answer?  How many siblings? vs. how many kids do your parents have?     Social Development  Health, happiness, and even survival depends on forming meaningful, effective relationships with family peers, and later, on the job (Zimbardo, 2007)  Nature brings our 1st step in this direction – a biological predisposition to smile. Social Development: Temperament  Temperament – An individual’s characteristic manner of behavior or reaction  Assumed to have a strong genetic basis.  10-15% babies “born shy”, 10-15% “born bold”  Nature / Nurture connection – which temperaments encourage interaction? Social Development  Attachment  an emotional tie with another person  shown in young children by their seeking closeness to the caregiver and displaying distress on separation  Develops in phases over 1st 24 months.  Once attachments are formed, fears and anxieties also appear. Social Development  Stranger Anxiety  fear of strangers that infants commonly display  beginning by about 8 months of age  Separation Anxiety  Distress the infant shows when object of attachment leaves  Peaks between 14 and 18 months “The Strange Situation”  Mary Ainsworth – Attachment studies  Displays attachment  Secure Attachment (Ideal) – 60%  Children show some distress when parent leaves, seek contact at the reunion, explore when parent gone, play and greet when parent present.  Insecure Attachments lack 1 or more of these traits  Behaviorists: What should the parent do in this scenario (assuming its real)? Social Development Percentage of infants 100 who cried when their mothers left 80  Groups of infants left by their mothers in a unfamiliar room (Kagan, 1976). Day care 60 40 Home 20 0 3.5 5.5 7.5 9.5 11.5 13.5 20 Age in months 29 Origins of Attachment  Critical Period  an optimal period shortly after birth when an organism’s exposure to certain stimuli or experiences produces proper development  Imprinting – Konrad Lorenz  the process by which certain animals form attachments during a critical period very early in life Origins of Attachment  Harlow’s Surrogate Mother Experiments  Monkeys preferred contact with the comfortable cloth mother, even while feeding from the nourishing wire mother Social Development  Monkeys raised by artificial mothers were terror-stricken when placed in strange situations without their surrogate mothers. Social Development  Basic Trust (Erik Erikson)  a sense that the world is predictable and trustworthy  said to be formed during infancy by appropriate experiences with responsive caregivers  Self-Concept  a sense of one’s identity and personal worth Social Development: ChildRearing Practices  Authoritarian  parents impose rules and expect obedience  “Don’t interrupt.” “Why? Because I said so.”  Permissive  submit to children’s desires, make few demands, use little punishment  Authoritative  both demanding and responsive  set rules, but explain reasons and encourage open discussion Social Development: Child-Rearing Practices