Psych Lifespan Development
cohort
A group of people who are born at roughly the same period in a particular society.
Normative history-graded influences
Biological and environmental influences that are associated with history. These influences are common to people of a particular generation.
Normative age-graded influences
Biological and environmental influences that are similar for individuals in a particular age group
Baltes lifespan perspective: plastic
Characteristics are malleable or changeable.
Baltes lifespan perspective: multidisciplinary
Consists of psychologists, psychiatrists, internists, pediatricians, nutritionists, social workers, dietician, and nurse specialities
Baltes lifespan perspective: lifelong
Development occurs across one's entire life
Baltes lifespan perspective: multidirectional
Gains and losses throughout life
Hawthorne effect
Individuals tend to change their behavior when they know they are being watched
Nonnormative influences
Influences on lifespan development that are irregular, in that they happen to just one or a few individuals and do not follow a predictable timetable
content analysis
Involves looking at media such as old texts, pictures, commercials, lyrics or other materials to explore patterns or themes in culture
Quantitative Research
Involves numerical data that are quantified using statistics to understand and report what has been studied
Baltes lifespan perspective: multidimensional
Involves the dynamic interaction of factors like physical, emotional, and psychosocial development
Baltes lifespan perspective: contextual
The idea that three systems of biological and environmental influences work together to influence development.
Qualitative Research
Theoretical ideas are "grounded" in the experiences of the participants, who answer open-ended questions
control group
a comparison group that is equivalent to the experimental group, but is not given the independent variable
scatterplot
a plot or mathematical diagram consisting of data points that represent two variables
double-blind
a research design in which neither the participants nor the researchers know whether an individual is assigned to the experimental group or the control group
Jesse recently started elementary school and is forming new relationships with other children and the teacher. Social comparisons with schoolmates begin to influence Jesse's self-esteem. The changes described here best illustrate Jesse's development in the ________ domain of human development. a. psychosocial b. brain c. physical d. cognitive
a. psychosocial
lifespan perspective
an approach to the study of human development that takes into account all phases of life, not just childhood or adulthood
Secondary Content Analysis
archival research, involves analyzing information that has already been collected or examining documents or media to uncover attitudes, practices or preferences
survey
asking a standard set of questions to a group of subjects
Culture
blueprint or guideline shared by a group of people that specifies how to live; passed down from generation to generation; learned from parents and others
selective attrition
certain groups of individuals may tend to drop out more frequently resulting in the remaining participants no longer being representative of the whole population
sequential research design
combines aspects of cross-sectional and longitudinal designs, but also adding new cohorts at different times of measurement; allows for analyses to consider effects of age, cohort, time of measurement, and socio-historical change
operationalized
concepts transformed into variables that can be measured in research
experiments
designed to test hypotheses in a controlled setting in efforts to explain how certain factors or events produce outcomes; the only research method that measures cause and effect relationships between variables
Childcare practices differ across cultures, and different practices have been found to influence when and how children reach certain developmental milestones, such as sitting, crawling, and walking. Which approach to human development is conveyed by this finding? a)Development is essentially the same, or universal, for all children. b)Development can follow a different course for each child. c)Development is a cumulative, smooth process of improvement. d)Development occurs in specific stages, at specific times or ages
different for each child
nurture
environmental, social, and cultural influences on behavior
variables
factors that change in value
discontinuous development
idea that development takes place in unique stages and occurs at specific times or ages
If cross-cultural research reveals that certain aspects of childhood physical development are the same and happen at the same ages in different countries, this would most likely be evidence for: a. the discontinuous process of human development b. many different courses of human development c. the influence of nurture on human development d. the influence of nature on human development
influence of nature
observational study (also called naturalistic observation)
involves watching and recording the actions of participants
Andrea's brain has recently reached its adult size, though it continues to develop; her body's growth has slowed down for now, and her motor skills are more coordinated. She is busy with learning and testing in school; her friendships with other girls are especially important. Considering all of this information, Andrea is probably in this period of human development: a. adolescence b. middle childhood c. early childhood d. early adulthood
middle childhood
correlation coefficient
number from -1 to +1, indicating the strength and direction of the relationship between variables, and usually represented by r
attrition
occurs when participants fail to complete all portions of a study
correlational research
research design with the goal of identifying patterns of relationships, but not cause and effect
evaluation research
research designed to assess the effectiveness of policies or programs
descriptive studies
research focused on describing an occurrence
correlational research
research that formally tests whether a relationship exists between two or more variables, however, correlation does not imply causation
experimental research
research that involves randomly assigning people to different conditions and using hypothesis testing to make inferences about how these conditions affect behavior; the only method that measures cause and effect between variables
explanatory studies
research that tries to answer the question "why"
Research indicates that family education, income, and occupation strongly influence the academic achievement gap across racial/ethnic groups. Which contextual influence on development does this exemplify? a. Culture b. Cohort c. History d. Socioeconomic status
socioeconomic status
independent variable
something that is manipulated or introduced by the researcher to the experimental group; treatment or intervention
hypotheses
specific statements or predictions about the relationship between variables
case study
study of one individual in great detail
longitudinal research
studying a group of people who may be of the same age and background (cohort), and measuring them repeatedly over a long period of time; may confound age and time of measurement effects
experimental group
the group of participants in an experiment who receive the independent variable
continuous development
the idea that development is a progressive and cumulative process, gradually improving on existing skills
nature
the influences of biology and genetics on behavior
dependent variable
the outcome or variable that is supposedly affected by the independent variable
Correlation
the relationship between two or more variables; when two variables are correlated, one variable changes as the other does
research design
the strategy or blueprint for deciding how to collect and analyze information; dictates which methods are used and how
negative correlation
two variables change in different directions, with one becoming larger as the other becomes smaller; a negative correlation is not the same thing as no correlation
positive correlation
two variables change in the same direction, both becoming either larger or smaller
Cross-sectional research
used to examine behavior in participants of different ages who are tested at the same point in time; may confound age and cohort differences
Validity
when something yields accurate results
Reliability
when something yields consistent results