Adult Development and Aging
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
A molecule capable of replicating itself that encodes information needed to produce proteins.
Identity Achievement vs. Identity Diffusion
Fifth stage of Erikson's Psychosocial Theory; when individuals must decide "who" they are and what they wish to get out of life; this stage emerges in adolescence, yet continues to hold importance throughout adulthood, forming a cornerstone of subsequent adult psychosocial crises.
Genome-Wide Association Study
A method used in behavior genetics in which researchers search for genetic variations related to complex diseases by scanning the entire genome.
Basic Trust vs. Basic Mistrust
First stage of Erikson's Psychosocial Theory; involves the infant's establishing a sense of being able to rely on care from the environment (and caregivers).
Industry vs. Inferiority
Fourth stage of Erikson's Psychosocial Theory; involves the individual's identifying with the world of work and developing a work ethic.
Primary/Normal Aging
Normal changes over time that occur due to universal, intrinsic, and progressive altercations in the body's system
Life Course Perspective
Norms, roles, and attitudes about age have an impact on the shape of each person's life. Not the same as life span. Refers to the progression of a person's life events, one that is heavily shaped by society's views of what is appropriate and expected to occur in connection with particular ages.
Interactionist Model
Not only do genetics and environment interact in complex ways to produce their effects on the individual, but that individuals actively shape their own development; most similar to nice-picking because it proposes that you can shape and be shaped by your own environments. Multidirectional, multidimensional, active, reciprocal.
Health Expectancy
Number of years a person could expect to live in good health and with relatively little disability if current mortality and morbidity rates persist
Multiple Jeopardy Hypothesis
Older individuals who fit more than one discriminated-against category are affected by biases against each of these categorizations.
Inoculation Hypothesis
Older minorities and women have actually become immune to the effects of ageism through years of exposure to discrimination and stereotyping.
Reciprocity in Development
People both influence and are influenced by the events in their lives; people are not only shaped by their experiences, but also shape many of the experiences that affect them.
Cententsrians
People over age 100
Terror Management Theory
People regard with panic and dread the thought of the finitude of their lives.
Assimilation
People use their existing schemas as a way to understand the world around them.
Disengagement Theory
Proposed that the normal and natural evolution of life causes older adults to purposefully loosen their social ties; this natural detachment is not only inevitable but desirable, and aging is accompanied by a mutual withdrawal process of the individual and society.
Cross-Linking Theory
Proposes that aging causes deleterious changes in cells of the body that make up much of the body's connective tissue, including the skin, tendons, muscle, and cartilage.
Autoimmune Theory
Proposes that aging is due to faulty immune system functioning in which the immune system attacks the body's own cells.
Age-as-Leveler View
Proposes that as people become older, age overrides all other "isms"; older adults, whatever their prior status in life was, all become victims of the same stereotypes.
Identity Process Theory
Proposes that identity continues to change adulthood in a dynamic manner.
Multiple Threshold Model
Proposes that individuals realize that they are getting older through a stepwise process as aging-related changes occur.
Mechanistic Model
Proposes that people's behavior changes gradually over time, shaped by the outside forces that cause them to adapt to their environments; growth throughout life occurs through the individual's exposure to experiences that present new learning opportunities. Quantitative; passive; external (environmental).
Continuity Theory
Proposes that whether disengagement or activity is beneficial to older adults depends on the individual's personality.
Chronosystem
Refers to the changes that take place over time; the interacting systems within the ecological model are affected by historical changes-these can include events within the family, for example, as well as events in the larger society that indirectly affect the individual by affecting the macrosystem.
Telomeres
Repeating sequences of proteins that contain no genetic information
Genome-Wide Linkage Study
Researchers study the families of people with specific psychological traits or disorders.
Modernization Hypothesis
The increasing urbanization and industrialization of Western society is what causes to be older adults to be devalued; they can no longer produce, so they become irrelevant and even a drain on the younger population.
Replicative Senescence
The loss of the ability of cells to reproduce
Equilibrium
When assimilation and accomodation are perfectly balanced
Accommodation
When you change your schemas in response to new information
Social Age
Where people are compared to the "typical" ages expected for people to be when they occupy certain positions in life life.
Ageism
A set of beliefs, attitudes, or groups based on their chronological age.
Developmental Science
A term that is gradually replacing the term developmental psychology as the focus on life span development continues to encompass a broader variety of domains than a sole focus on the psychology of the individual.
Self-efficacy
A term used for the social psychological literature to refer to a person's feelings of competence at a particular task.
Biopsychosocial Perspective
A view of development as a complex interaction of biological, psychological, and social processes.
Secondary/Impaired Aging
Changes over time leading to impairment due to disease rather than normal aginf
Personal Aging
Changes that occur within the individual and reflect the influence of time's passage on the body's structures and functions
Antioxidants
Chemicals that prevent the formation of free radicals
Collagen
Cross-links develop in these; the fibrous protein that makes up about one-quarter of all bodily proteins
Pyschosocial Theory of Development
Developed by Erik Erikson; proposes that at certain points in life, a person's biological, psychological, and social changes come together to influence our personality; defined each stage of development as a "crisis" or turning point that influences how people resolve the issues they face in a subsequent period in life.
Interindividual Differences
Differences between people.
Chromosomes
Distinct, physically separate units of coiled threads of DNA and associated protein molecules.
Microsystem
In the center of the ecological model; the setting in which people have their daily interactions and which therefore have the most direct impact on their lives.
The Wear and Tear Theory
Many people implicitly refer to this when they say they feel that they are "falling apart" as they get older.
Life Span
Maximum age for a given species
Identity Accommodation
People make changes in their identities in response to experiences that challenge their current view of themselves.
Gompertz Function
Plots the relationship between age and death rates for a given species.
Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
Second stage of Erikson's Psychosocial Theory; Young children learn ways to act independently from their parents without feeling afraid that they will venture too far off on their own.
Free Radical Theory
The cause of aging is the increased activity of these unstable oxygen molecules that bond to other molecules and compromise the cell's functioning.
Genome
The complete set of instructions for "building" all the cells that make up an organism.
Generativity vs Stagnation
Seventh stage of Erikson's Psychosocial Theory; middle-aged adults focus on the psychosocial issues of procreation, productivity, and creativity. Most common way to this is through parenthood, an endeavor that involved direct-care of the next generation.
Intimacy vs Isolation
Sixth stage of Erikson's Psychosocial Theory; individuals are faced with making commitments to close relationships-attaining this involves establishing a mutually satisfying close relationship with another person to whom a lifelong commitment is made.
Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs)
Small genetic variations that can occur in a person's DNA sequence.
Baby Boom Generation
Term used to describe people born I. The post World War II years of 1946-1964
Identity Assimilation
The tendency to interpret new experiences in terms of a person's existing identity.
Intra-Individual Differences
The variations in performance within the same individual
Activity Theory
The view that older adults are most satisfied if they are able to remain in their social roles.
Identity
A composite of how people view themselves in the biological psychological and social domains of life.
Gene
A functional unit of a DNA molecule carrying a particular set of instructions for producing a specific protein.
FOXO Genes
A group of genes that may operate to influence the rate of cell death.
Selective Optimization with Compensation Model (SOC)
Adults attempt to preserve and maximize the abilities that are of central importance and put less effort into maintaining those that are not. Older people make conscious decisions regarding how to spend their time and effort in the face of losses in physical and cognitive resources.
Biological Age
Age of an individual's body system
Supercententarians
Ages 110 and okder
Young-Old
Ages 65-74
Old-Old
Ages 75-84
Oldest-Old
Ages 85 and older.
Mutations
Alterations to a gene
Normative-History Graded Influences
Events that occur to everyone within a certain culture geopolitical unit (regardless of age) and include large-scale occurrences, such as world wars, economic trends, or sociocultural changes in attitudes or values
Epigenetic Principle
Asserts that each stage of development unfolds from the previous stage according to a predestined order; these stages are set in much the same manner as the programming for the biological development of the individual throughout life.
Ego Integrity vs. Despair
Eighth stage of Erikson's Psychosocial Theory; individuals face psychosocial issues related to aging and facing their mortaility.
Normal Aging is Different from Disease
Growing older does not equal growing sicker
Compression of Morbidity
Illness burden to society can be reduced if people become disabled closer to the time of their death
Exosystem
Includes the environments that people do not closely experience on a regular basis but that impact them nevertheless. These environments include such institutions such as the workplace and community centers as well as extended family, whom may not be seen often.
Macrosystem
Includes the larger social institutions ranging from a country's economy to its laws and social norms; influences the individual directly through the exosystem.
Contextual Influences on Development
Incorporates the effects of sex, race, ethnicity, social class, religion, and culture.
Normative Age-Graded Influences
Lead people to choose experiences that their culture and historical period attach to certain ages or points in the life span.
Programmed Aging Theories
Propose that aging and death are built into the hard-wiring of all organisms and therefore are part of the genetic code.
Error Theories
Propose that mutations acquired over the organism's lifetime lead to malfunctioning of the body's cells.
Ecological Perspective
Proposed by developmental theorist Urie Bronfenbrenner (1994), identifies multiple levels of the environment as they affect the individuals over time; defines five levels of the environment or "systems", all of which interact in their influence on the individual and influence development in different ways. Center to outside: microsystem, mesosystem, exosystem, macrosystem
Organismic Model
Proposed that heredity drives the course of development throughout life; changes over time occur because the individual is programmed to exhibit certain behaviors at certain ages with distinct differences between stages of life. Qualitative; active; biological (intrinsic).
Social Aging
The effects of a person's exposure to a changing environment.
Error Catastrophe Theory
The errors that accumulate with aging are ones that are vital to life itself
Social Clock
The expectations for the ages at which a society associates with major life events, which set the ace for how people think they should progress through their family and work timelines.
Life Expectancy
The average number of years of life remaining to the people born within a similar period of time
Plasticity in Development
The course of development may be altered, depending on the nature of the individual's specific interactions in the environment.
Identity Balance
The dynamic equilibirum that occurs when people tend to view themselves consistently but can mae changes when called for by their experiences.
Geriatrics
The medical specialty in aging; an interdisciplinary field that draws from biology, sociology, anthropology, the humanities, and other behavioral and social sciences.
Schemas
The mental structures we use to understand the world.
Survivor Principle
The people who live to old age are the ones who managed to outlive the many threats that could have cause their deaths at earlier ages.
Psychological Age
The performance an individual achieves on measures of such qualities of reaction time, memory, learning ability, and intelligence.
Niche-Picking
The proposal that genetic and environmental factors work together to influence the direction of a child's life.
Nonnormative Influences
The random idiosyncratic events that occur throughout life
Mesosystem
The realm of the environment in which interactions take place among two or more microsystems (ex: home difficulties carrying over into co-worker relationships).
Gerentology
The scientific study of the aging process.
Identity
The set of schemas that the person holds about the self.
Caloric Restriction Hypothesis
The view that the key to prolonging life is to restrict caloric intake.
Initiative vs. Guilt
Third stage of Erikson's Psychosocial Theory; The child becomes able to engage in creative self-expression without fear of making a mistake
Free Radicals
Unstable oxygen molecules produced when cells create energy
Emerging Adulthood
Up to as many as the first 10-11 years of adulthood; transition prior to assuming the full responsibilities of adulthood, usually ages 18-29
Life Span Perspective
Views development as continuous from childhood through old age.