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Infant Capacities and the Process of Change Chapter 4 The Development of Children (5th ed.) Cole, Cole & Lightfoot What does this mean? “Babies control and bring up their families as much as they are controlled by them; in fact, we may say that the family brings up a baby by being brought up by him.” Erik Erikson in Childhood and Society Why is this the case? Compared with many animals that are able to negotiate their environments at birth almost as well as their parents, human beings are born in a state of marked immaturity…. For many years, human offspring must depend on their parents and other adults for their survival.” Cole, Cole & Lightfoot, p. 114 Overview of the Journey Tuesday: Brain development Earliest capacities Coordination with the social world Thursday: Mechanisms of development First postnatal BSB shift Infant Brain Development At birth, the brain has all the cells it will have, yet it is ¼ the size of an adult brain. Why? Because Experience Matters! Rats Raised in Enriched Environments have… Increased rates of learning in standard laboratory tasks, such as learning a maze Increased overall weight of the cerebral cortex (the part of the brain that integrates sensory information) Increased amounts of acetylcholinesterase, a brain enzyme that enhances learning Larger neuronal cell bodies and glial cells (which provide insulation, support and nutrients to neuronal cells) More synaptic connections Rosenzweig, 1984 Active Interaction with the Environment Rats were raised in an enriched environment but were housed alone in small cages so they could only observe what was going on around them The learning capacity of these rats differed in no way from that of the animals that were housed in individual cages away from the enriched environment What might this imply for child-rearing? For teaching? Brain Elements and Functions Six Mammalian Species Why the difference? Earliest Infant Capacities Sensory Processes Response Processes Early Sensory Capacities Sense Capacity Hearing Ability to distinguish phonemes Preference for native language Vision Slightly blurred at birth Color vision by 2 months Distinguish patterned stimuli from plain Preference for face-like stimuli Smell Ability to differentiate odors well at birth Taste Ability to differentiate tastes well at birth Touch Response to touch at birth Temperature Sensitivity to temperature changes at birth Position Sensitivity to changes in position at birth Sensory Processes Normal full-term newborns enter the world with all sensory systems functioning, but not all of these systems have fully developed Indications of sensation Turning the head, changes in brain waves, changes in rate of sucking on a nipple Habituation: Baby becomes bored so s/he stops attending Dishabituation: Interest is renewed after the infant perceives a change in the stimulus Hearing Infants only minutes old will startle or cry when they hear a loud noise Infants will turn their heads toward the source of a sound Baby Scotty at 5 minutes old Infants can distinguish the sound of the human voice from other kinds of sounds, and seem to prefer it Babies are very interested in high pitch speech with slower, exaggerated pronunciation (i.e., “baby talk”) Evidence that by 2 days old, some babies would rather hear the language that has been spoken around them than a foreign language Infants’ Visual Capacity Based on studies of infant eye movement when a striped visual field passes in front of the eyes, it is evident that visual capacity increases dramatically over the first few months of life. Fantz Looking Chamber (1960s) Demonstrated that babies less than 2 days old can distinguish among visual forms They tend, however, to focus on areas of high contrast, such as lines and angles Development of Visual Scanning Due to brain maturation Perception of Faces Infants show a preference for patterned stimuli over plain stimuli Babies as young as 9 minutes old will look longer at a schematic moving face than a scrambled one Visual Preferences of Infants Expressions of Various Tastes Neutral stimulus (water) Sweet stimulus Sour stimulus Bitter stimulus Three Kinds of Response Processes Reflexes Emotions Automatic (involuntary) responses to specific types of stimulation… Two basic emotions, contentment (+) & distress (-), split into primary emotions (e.g., joy, anger, fear) at 3-6 months… Temperament Individual modes of responding to the environment that appear to be consistent across situations and stable over time… Reflexes: involuntary movements that are present at birth, then some fade into voluntary movements over time Grasping Reflex: When a finger or some other object is pressed against the baby’s palm, the baby’s fingers close around it Stepping Reflex: When the baby is held upright over a flat surface, he makes rhythmic leg movements Moro Reflex: Baby startles when s/he hears a loud sound Babinski reflex: Toes fan outward when foot is stroked from heel to toe Infant Expression of Emotions Joy Anger Sadness Disgust Distress Interest Fear Surprise Infant Expression of Emotions Joy Anger Sadness Disgust Distress Interest Fear Surprise Temperaments Easy babies (flexible): Playful, regular, adaptable Difficult babies (feisty): Irritable, irregular, often respond intensely or negatively to new situations Slow-to-warm-up babies (fearful): Low activity level, mild responses, tend to withdraw from new situations, require time to adapt to change Temperament is stable over first 8 years of life, due to both genetic (nature) and environmental (nurture) elements Coordination with the Social World Sleeping Feeding Crying Pattern of Sleep/Wake Cycles Newborns sleep ~16½ hours /day, but the longest period of sleep is only 3-4 hours. Feeding When fed “on demand” most newborns preferred a 3-hour schedule Interval gradually increased to 4-hour schedule by 2 ½ months By 7 or 8 months, babies needed to nurse or eat 4 times a day Allison and nursing Crying Increases from birth to about 6 weeks and then starts to decrease At a few months of age, infants begin to cry to communicate as the cerebral cortex becomes developed Crying is helped by nursing, holding baby to shoulder, rocking, patting, cuddling, swaddling Thursday: Mechanisms (Theories) of Developmental Change Biological-Maturation Perspective Environmental-Learning Perspective Constructivist Perspective Cultural-Context Perspective Biological-Maturation Examples Physical Development Language Development Single-sounds, single-words, multiple words, sentences Play Development Roll over, push up on all fours, crawl, walk, run Solo play, parallel play, associative play, cooperative play Emotional Development Trust the parent, interact with others, contribute to the group Development occurs over time, in a set sequence of events, and is directly related to brain growth and maturation Environmental Learning Perspective BF Skinner, J Watson Children grow on a schedule, and developmental shifts happen when the child’s brain is ready Environmental Learning The child learns as a result of interacting with the environment. Behaviors that are reinforced will increase and behaviors that are punished will decrease. Classical and Operant Conditioning Sight of a light (CS) elicits no particular response Loud sound of gong (UCS) causes baby to blink (UCR) Sight of light (CS) is paired with sound of gong (UCS), which evokes an eyeblink (UCR) Sight of light (CD) is sufficient to cause the baby to blink (CR), evidence that learning has occurred Research on Head Turning Behavior: After only 25 occasions in which head turning was reinforced with a pacifier, most of the babies had tripled the rate at which they turned their heads. Conversely, those infants who were rewarded with a pacifier for holding their heads still, learned to move their heads less during the course of the experiment. Constructivist Perspective Jean Piaget Children grow predictably, and developmental shifts happen when the child is interested and adds new information to what s/he already knows Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development Age (Yrs) Stage Description Birth – 2 Sensorimotor Achievements consist largely of coordinating sensory perceptions and simple motor behaviors. Come to recognize the existence of a world outside themselves and begin to interact with it in deliberate ways. 2–6 Preoperational Can use symbols, including mental images, words, and gestures. Often fail to distinguish their point of view from that of others, become easily captured by surface appearances, and are often confused about causal relationships. 6 – 12 Concrete Become capable of mental operations that allow them to Operational combine, separate, order, and transform objects and actions. There are still carried out, however, in the presence of the objects and events being thought about. 12 – 19 Formal Acquire the ability to think systematically about all logical Operational relations within a problem. Display keen interest in abstract ideas and in the process of thinking itself. Sensorimotor Substages Sub Age (M) Description 1 0–1½ Reflex schemas exercised: Involuntary rooting, sucking, grasping, looking 2 1½–4 Primary circular reactions: Repetition of actions that are pleasurable in themselves 3 4–8 Secondary circular reactions: Dawning awareness of the effects of one’s own actions on the environment, and that extended actions can produce interesting change in the environment 4 8 – 12 Coordination of secondary circular reactions: Combining schemas to achieve a desired effect (earliest form of problem solving) 5 12 – 18 Tertiary circular reactions: Deliberate variation of problem-solving means, with experimentation to see what the consequences will be 6 18 – 24 Beginning of symbolic representation: Images and words come to stand for familiar objects, accompanied by the invention of new means of problem solving through symbolic combinations Schemas: a mental representation Assimilation Accommodation (new information added into an existing schema) (Modification of a prior schema to include the new information) Equilibration Adding new knowledge and skills leads to development Cultural-Context Perspective Vygotsky Children’s growth is impacted by their culture and environment, and developmental shifts happen when the child is engaged in social and cultural experiences Reciprocal Relationships Presence of milk stimulates infant sucking, which in turn triggers the release of hormones that increase milk production and release Developmental Change Incorporates Cultural Variations Developmental change depends on The Active contributions of other people in the child’s community Cultural messages are accumulated over time in the larger social group and provide messages about behavior Case in Point Bottle-feeding vs. Breast-feeding First Postnatal Bio-Social-Behavioral Shift Occurs at 2½ Months Social Smiling! Bio-Social-Behavioral Shift: When Social Smiling Happens Shift Point Conception Birth 2 ½ months 7-9 months 24-30 months 5-7 years 11-12 years 19-21 years Developmental Period Prenatal period Early infancy Middle infancy Late infancy Early childhood Middle childhood Adolescence Adulthood Characteristics of the Shift Biological Social Behavioral Myelination of cortical and subcortical neural pathways Increased cortical control of subcortical activity Increased diversity of brain cells Increase in amount of wakefulness Decrease in proportion of active (REM) sleep Quiet (NREM) sleep begins to come first New quality of coordination and emotional contact between infants and caretakers Beginning of “crying on purpose” to communicate Better retention of learning Increased visual acuity and better visual scanning Onset of social smiling Decreased fussiness and crying Visually initiated reaching visually guided reaching Purposes of Social Smiling Biological Increased brain capacity increases ability to control facial movements Increased brain functioning increases ability to make decisions and use their body Social Initiate and respond to interactions with parents, siblings, family members Behavioral Reinforces interactions with others Shows engagement with others