Invitation to the Life Span - Ch. 1-3
XY
a 23rd chromosome pair that consists of an X-shaped chromosome from the mother and a Y-shaped chromosome from the father, male
XX
a 23rd chromosome pair that consists of two X-shaped chromosomes, female
head-sparing
a biological mechanism that protects the brain when malnutrition disrupts body growth.
preterm birth
a birth that occurs 3 or more weeks before the full 38 weeks of the typical pregnancy have elapsed
extremely low birthweight
a body weight at birth of less than 2 pounds 3 ounces
very low birthweight
a body weight at birth of less than 3 pounds 5 ounces
low birthweight
a body weight at birth of less than 5.5 pounds
neurotransmitter
a brain chemical that carries information from the axon of a sending neuron to the dendrites of a receiving neuron
fetal alcohol syndrom
a cluster of birth defects that may occur in the child of a woman who drinks alcohol while pregnant
Down Syndrome
a condition in which a person has 47 chromosomes instead of the usual 46, with three rather than two chromosomes at the 21st position
cohort
a group defined by it members' shared age, which means that they travel through life together
shaken baby syndome
a life-threatening injury that occurs when an infant is forcefully shaken back and forth, a motion that ruptures blood vessels in the brain and breaks neural connections
phenotype
a person's actual appearance and manifest behavior
classical coniditioning
a process in which a person or animal learns to associate a neutral stimulus with a meaningful stimulus, gradually reacting to the neutral stimulus with the same response
Apgar scale
a quick assesment of a newborn's body functioning
phenylketonuria (PKU)
a recessive condition for which northern Europeans are particularly at risk
gamete
a reproductive cell; sperm in males, ovum in females
longitudinal research
a research design in which the same individuals are followed over time and their development is repeatedly assessed.
cross-sectional research
a research design that compares groups of people who differ in age but are similar in other important characteristics
survey
a research method in which information is collected from large number of people by interviews, written questions, or some other means
genes
a section of chromosomes and the basic unit for the transmission of heredity, consisting of a string of chemicals that are instructions for the cell to manufacture certain proteins
postpartum depression
a sense of inadequacy and sadness
REM (rapid eye movement) sleep
a stage of sleep characterized by flickering eyes behind closed lids
heritability
a statistical term that indivates what portion of the variation in a particular trait within a particular population is inherited
developmental theory
a systematic statement of principles and generalizations that provides us a framework for understanding how and why people change as they grow older
behaviorism
a theory of human development that studies observable behavior
critical period
a time when certain things must occur for normal development
scientific method
a way to answer questions that requires empirical research and data-based conclusions
doula
a woman who helps with labor, delivery, breast-feeding and newborn care
polygenic
affected by many genes
life-spand perspective
an approach to the study of human development that takes into account all phases of life, not just childhood or adulthood
norm
an average, or standard, for a particular population
social construction
an idea created by society
sonogram
an image similar to an X-ray except that is uses sound waves instead of radiation, aka ultrasound
operant conditioning
animals perform some action and a response occurs
reinforcement
any consequence that follows a behavior and makes the person likely to repeat that behavior
neuron
brain cells
fragile X syndrome
caused by a single gene that has more than 200 repetitions of a triplet
mirror neurons
cells in an observer's brain that respond to an action performed by someone else in the same way they would if the observer had actually performed that action
gross motor skills
deliberate, coordinated actions that produce large movements, usually involving several parts of the body
regulator gene
direct polygenic interactions, controlling the genetic expression, duplication, and transcription of the other genes
additive gene
effects add up to make the phenotype (height, hair curliness, hair color, etc)
correlation
exists between two variables if one variable is more (or less) likely to occur when the other
dizygotic twins
fraternal twins and occur twice as often as monozygotic twins
fetal period
from the ninth week until birth, during which the fetus grows in size and matures in functioning
genetic counseling
helps people know how likely they are to conceive a child with a severe genetic or chromosomal condition
monozygotic twins
identical twins
multifactorial
influenced by many factors
psychoanalytic theory
inner drives and motives
reflex
involuntary responses to a particular stimulus
dendrite
nerve fiber that extends from a neuron and receives electrochemical impulses
axon
nerve fiber that extends from a neuron and transmits electrochemical impulses
sensation
occurs when a sensory system detects a stimulus
perception
occurs when the brain processes a sensation
dominant-recessive pattern
one allele, the dominant gene, is far more influential than the other, the recessive gene
chromosome
one of 46 molecules of DNA that each cell of the human body contains and that, together, contain all the genes.
cortex
outer layers of brain
ethnic group
people who share certain attributes, almost always including ancestral heritage and often national origin, religion, culture, and language
epigenetic
refers to the environmental factors that surround the genes affecting genetic expression
nurture
refers to the environmental influences, beginning with the health and diet of the embryo's mother and continuing lifelong, including family, school, community, and society
nature
refers to the influence of genes that people inherit
socioeconomic status
reflects income, wealth, occupation, education, and place of residence
scientific observation
requires the researcher to record behavior systematically and objectively
qualititative research
research that considers qualitities instead of quantities
quantitative research
research that provides data that can be expressed with numbers, such as rank or scales
cross-sequential research
researches study several groups of people of different ages and follow them over the years
science of human development
seeks to understand how and why people change over time.
fine motor skills
small body movements
dynamic systems theory
stresses fluctuations and transitions, "the dynamic synthesis of multiple levels of analysis"
teratogens
substances and conditions that increase the risk of prenatal abnormalities
threshold effect
teratogens that are virtually harmless until exposure reaches a certain level and become damaging
small for gestational age
the baby's birthweight is significantly lower than expected, given the time since conception
genome
the entire packet of instructions to make a living organism
cesarean section (c-section)
the fetus is removed through surgery
germinal period
the first two weeks of prenatal development, characterized by rapid cell division and the beginning of cell differentiation
synapse
the intersection between the axon of one neuron and the dendrite of another neuron
prefrontal cortex
the last part of the brain to mature. the area for anticipation, planning and impulse control
DNA
the molecule that contains the chemical instructions for cells to manufacture various proteins
kangaroo care
the mother of a low-birthweight infant holds her newborn between her breasts, skin-to-skin, allowing the tiny baby to hear her heartbeat and feel her body heat
fetus
the name for the developing human organism from the start of the ninth week until birth
embryo
the name for the developing organism from about the third week through the eighth week
placenta
the organ that will support the developing life
genotype
the organism's genetic inheritance
age of viability
the point in development when a preterm newborn can survive
implantation
the process by which the developing placenta connects to the nurturing environment of the uterus
conditioning
the processes by which responses become linked to particular stimuli
replication
the repeptition of a study, using different participants
zygote
the single cell that is formed from the fusing of two gametes
parent-infant bond
the strong, loving connection that forms as parents hold, examine, and feed their newborn
embroyonic period
the third through eighth week after conception, during which the basic forms of all body structures, including internal organs, develop
experiment
the usual research method used to establish what causes what
independent variable
the variable that is introduced to see what effect it has on the DV.
dependent variable
the variable that may change as a result of whatever new condition or situation the experimenter adds
ecological-systems approach
the view that in the study of human development, the person should be considered in all the contexts and interactions that constitute a life
social learning theory
this theory suggests that, because humans are social beings, they learn from observing others
cognitive theory
thoughts and expectations profoundly affect actions
difference-equals-deficit error
to conclude that someone who is different from us is inferior
allele
variation of a gene
carrier
we "carry" a gene that will be transmitted to half our sperm or ovum but will be recessive
sensitive period
when a particular development occurs most easily