Exams 1-4

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As part of a conservation-of-number task, Abigail counts the same number of items in each of two rows but says that the experimenter's longer row has more. When asked why, her MOST likely response is:

"This row goes all the way here"

According to Piaget, "egocentrism" referred to the characteristic ____________ thinking of young children.

"centered on oneself"

Children acquire ____________ words by the time they are 13 to 14 months old and ____________ words by the time they are 17 to 18 months of age.

10; 50

By adulthood the percentage of a person's body that is the head is about:

12 percent

Mitotic division of the zygote begins within how many hours after conception?

24 hours

Jasmin's family has begun expecting her to help out around the family's farm and take care of her younger siblings. Jasmin is probably age:

6

Baby Claire is in her crib when her mother hears her vocalize "babababababa" for the first time. How old is Claire likely to be?

7 months

Katti's big sister is anxious for her newborn sister to start crawling. How long will she likely have to wait before Katti achieves this skill?

9 months

In which of the following countries has the rate of birth defects been linked to high rates of pollution?

All of the answers are correct (Brazil, China, and the US)

Bidziil, a Navajo child and Ellie, a European American child are shown a schematic drawing of a maze and asked to find the most direct, obstacle-free path from their school to their home with a stop at the store. What is most likely to happen?

Bidziil will take more time planning but will make fewer mistakes.

Erica's daughter started to walk holding onto furniture at 7 months of age, while Janya's son started to walk holding onto furniture at 12 months of age. How should Erica and Janya respond to their children's abilities?

Both Erica and Janya should be happy with how their children are developing because they are walking holding onto furniture within the range of ages found to do so in a national study.

Harlow's studies of attachment in monkeys support which ideas about attachment?

Bowlby's evolutionary theory

Which of the following is a true statement about breastfed babies?

Breastfed children tend to score higher on tests of cognitive functioning than children who are fed formula.

What assumption did Piaget make about children's learning?

Children actively construct understandings of the world around them.

Freud would MOST likely agree with which ideas about attachment?

Children become attached to those who satisfy their basic biological drives.

Realistic mathematics education fits with which view?

Children learn basic math skills best when they are linked with real-world problems.

Piaget would be most likely to support which of the following statements about cognitive development?

Children undergo a radical shift in cognitive abilities at the end of infancy.

A review of contemporary research on children's and adults' conceptions of God justifies which conclusion?

Conceptions of God change for both adults and for children as a function of context.

Why do cross-cultural studies of memory and concrete-operational thinking have different implications?

Concrete-operations are thought to reflect basic universal mental operations, whereas specific memory strategies are tied to specific task requirements.

Thomas feels most successful when he and his friends help each other do their best. What type of basic social goal is Thomas exhibiting?

Cooperation goal

Which of the following is linked with having an extra 21st chromosome?

Down syndrome

Over the course of the fetal period of development, which of the following occurs?

Each organ system increases in complexity.

Which country commissioned Simon and Binet to create a test for diagnosing mental subnormality?

France

Which theorist developed the series of psychosexual stages of development?

Freud

Which of the following patterns describes Thomas's aggressive behavior toward other children? Thomas is three years old.

He is more physically aggressive toward boys than girls.

Terrance, age two months, turned his head toward his mother every time she spoke to him in "baby talk" or Child Directed Speech (e.g., spoken at a high pitch with slow, exaggerated pronunciation). What conclusion can you draw from this example?

His hearing capacities are developing normally.

Tiffany Field compared infants' reactions to their own images in a mirror to their reactions to the images of other infants. Which of the following BEST describes the results of this study?

Infants looked longer at their own images but smiled more at the images of other babies.

Which genetic disorder affects only males?

Klinefelter syndrome

"Let's Move!", a national campaign to battle childhood obesity, was created by First Lady:

Michelle Obama

What influence does the help of allocaregivers have on children and families?

Mothers who are supported by allocaregivers are likely to have more children.

Nori and Maria are cousins who are 10 years old. Although Nori's parents are originally from Guatemala, she has been raised in the United States. Her cousin Maria has been raised in Guatemala. Based on Bogin's study with Mayan families, what is likely to be the physical growth of the girls?

Nori is taller than Maria.

Elida and Pilar are two girls from the same village. Elida's mother did not attend school growing up, but Pilar's mother attended elementary school as a child. What do we know about the girls based on past research comparing children of mothers who had no formal schooling versus children of mothers who did?

Pilar had better health during childhood

Rh incompatibility occurs when an:

Rh-negative woman is carrying an Rh-positive fetus.

_____ is (are) evident in a pattern of emotional development observed in some boys who have been institutionalized as infants. Those who had been institutionalized were less adventurous in childhood but more impulsive during adolescence than those who had not been institutionalized.

Sleeper effects

What is a measure that uses information on parents' income level, education level, and occupation to assess economic hardship experience by families?

Socioeconomic Status

Which of the following is a true statement about the principles underlying teratogenic effects?

Susceptibility to teratogens varies with the developmental stage of the fetus at the time of exposure.

According to Eisenberg, sympathy and personal distress differ in which of the following ways?

Sympathy is an other-oriented response to another's distress whereas personal distress is a self-focused reaction.

Which of the following illustrates the cephalocaudal pattern of prenatal development?

The arms develop earlier than the legs

The brain of an adult is approximately four times larger than that of a newborn. What accounts for this tremendous growth?

The complexity of networks between neurons increases.

Why is the seventh month sometimes referred to as the "age of viability"?

The fetus's lungs are capable of breathing air.

Which of the following BEST describes the pattern of brain development in early childhood?

The rate of my myelination, synaptic pruning, and synaptogenesis is inconsistent across brain areas.

How are children with learning disabilities distinguished from their classmates?

There is a discrepancy between their performance on different parts of the IQ test.

Which trend in physical growth occurs during middle childhood?

There is an increase in fat tissue

Josefa and Ann have birthdays one month apart. Josefa's birth date puts her in first grade while Ann's puts her in kindergarten. When they are tested on a recall test at the end of the school year, Josefa remembers more items than Ann. What would you tell Ann's mother about this result?

These results are to be expected because participation in school tends to help a child learn strategies useful in recall tasks.

Which of the following results is true of deaf children born to parents who communicate with sign language?

They acquire sign language as rapidly as hearing children born into hearing households acquire vocal language.

Which of the following is an example of the "centered" thinking of young children?

They report that a tall and narrow beaker has more water than a shorter and wider beaker even when the amount of water is the same.

A person who is genetically male has received a(n):

X chromosome from his mother and a Y chromosome from his father.

The early presence and disappearance of developmental reflexes, such as grasping and the Moro reflex, are:

a basic sign of normal neurological development

When children try to remember a list of information by repeating it again and again, they are using:

a memory strategy

A psychology instructor analyzing exam scores notices that the better her students performed on the lecture-based questions, the more poorly they performed on the textbook-based questions. She has discovered:

a negative correlation between scores on the two parts of the exam.

Sensitive periods in development refer to times when:

a particular experience has a more pronounced effect on the organism than at other times.

James and Brenda are married and want to have a baby. Both have had samples of their blood and saliva tested to determine the risk of genetic disorders among their offspring. This type of test is called:

a preconception test

Newborn monkeys who were removed from their mothers and placed in cages with two inanimate "substitute" mothers exhibited which of the following behaviors?

a preference for the terry cloth "mother" over the wire "mother"

According to Piaget, if an infant discovers that when she kicks the mobile above her crib the fairy-tale characters flutter, then repeats this action many times, this is an example of:

a secondary circular reaction.

The sex of an individual is controlled by:

a single chromosome

Vickie sees herself as a poor student in math class, but she would like to be the most accomplished student in the class. Vickie is demonstrating a discrepancy between her _____ self and her _____ self.

actual; ideal

A gender schema is a mental model that is used to process:

all types of gender-relevant information.

Cross-cultural research on the relationship between parenting style and mother-infant attachment statuses reveals that:

although attachments status may be universal, similar attachment outcomes may result from seemingly disparate caregiving experiences.

Marge is pregnant and is having a test performed that involves inserting a needle into her uterus and withdrawing amniotic fluid containing fetal cells that can be analyzed for genetic disorders. What test did she have done?

amniocentesis

Terrance has been learning to weave hats by moving in with his uncle and then shadowing him and watching him weave hats. Terrance is learning through:

apprenticeship

The sex-typed expectations of parents for their newborn

are an example of the influence of cultural expectations on development

Mechanisms that limit aggression:

are widespread among animal species

Which of the following is an example of a child using a mental operation?

arranging a stamp collection according to country of origin

Stacey expects her children to follow family rules, but she explains these rules to her children so they understand why they are needed. Stacey is using which kind of parenting style?

authoritative

The placenta acts as a(n):

barrier and filter

When do developmental psychologists say attachment typically form in humans?

between 7 and 9 months of age

When does secondary intersubjectivity generally emerge?

between 9 and 12 months of age

Somatic cells are:

body cells

Emotions involve:

both physiological reactions and cognitive evaluations.

Monozygotic twins:

can be same-sex or opposite-sex

"Totipotent stem cells" are those that:

can become an entire organism, or any type of tissue cell.

The fact that most 3- to 4-year-old children know that a person in a costume is the same person when in his or her regular clothes indicates that children at this age:

can distinguish appearance from reality.

Individuals who are heterozygous for a trait with a dominant and recessive allele and thus express only the characteristics associated with the dominant allele but may pass the recessive allele on to their offspring are said to be:

carriers

Young children's tendency to focus on only one feature of an object is called:

centration

At birth, which area of the central nervous system is the LEAST mature?

cerebral cortex

Identity refers to understanding that:

changes limited to outside appearance do not change the amounts involved.

Bullying appears to peak during the sixth grade in American schools because:

children are moving from elementary to middle school, and new social groups are forming.

Type AB blood is an example of:

codominance

When two different alleles both express themselves in a heterozygous individual in a way that is different from the expression of either allele alone, these alleles are said to be:

codominant

In Europe and North America, intelligence is defined mainly in:

cognitive terms

According to Piaget, young children who take turns speaking but do not appear to be having a true dialogue are engaged in:

collective monologues

Research has demonstrated that young children have the _____ to take the perspectives of others, but their _____ may be affected by the demands of the task.

competence; performance

Dr. Psychology is conducting research to determine if development is a gradual, continuous process or one that involves rapid change. He is mostly concerned with which central issue of developmental science?

continuity/discontinuity

Research has suggested that the key to high self-esteem, transmitted in large part by the family, is some ability to:

control one's own future

Studies have shown that a mother who is under stress secretes hormones, such as ____________, that pass through the placenta and have a measurable effect on the fetus's motor activity.

cortisol

Boys are more likely to be faster at running and better at throwing and catching than girls because:

cultural expectations

In addition to a "survival goal" and an "economic goal," parents the world over strive to ensure that their children acquire the basic values of the group. Robert LeVine refers to this as the:

cultural goal

Which of the following is NOT a way in which formal education differs from traditional apprenticeship training?

decoding strategies implemented

Emotions such as embarrassment, pride, and shame are called "self-conscious emotions" because they:

depend on children's newly-acquired abilities to recognize, talk about, and think about themselves in relation to other people.

John is a securely attached infant. His mother is likely all of the following except:

depressed

A person's phenotype is ____________ while his/her genotype is ____________.

developed through interactions with the environment; constant over his/her life

Wayne and Margaret Dennis found that traditionally raised Hopi infants who had been strapped to cradle boards:

did not differ in age of independent walking from infants for whom cradle boards were not used.

The paths that boys and girls take to establish their gender identity are:

different because of their respective differences from, and similarities to, their mother.

While watching "Dora the Explorer," Josie enthusiastically responds to Dora's questions by shouting out responses. Her willingness to enter into conversations with TV characters reflects her:

difficulty distinguishing between appearance and reality.

Which of the following is a sign that infants have become attached to their caretakers?

distress on separation

Exposure to teratogenic agents is MOST likely to result in spontaneous abortion when the exposure occurs:

during the first 2 weeks after conception.

Children with a disability who display a pattern of performance in which their verbal IQ is high and their quantitative IQ is low have:

dyscalculia

Chess and Thomas and their colleagues classified babies' temperaments as:

easy, difficult, and slow to warm up

The inhibition of an action that is already underway is called:

effortful control

Alicia is very competitive with her peers and only feels successful when she can do better than her friends. Alicia has what type of social goal?

ego-oriented goal

Nancy covers her eyes with her hands when the wicked witch appears on her television screen. What type of behavior is Nancy engaging in?

emotion regulation

During gestation, the digestive system develops from the layer of cells called the:

endoderm

Information-processing theorists view the main components of the mind as including all of the following EXCEPT:

environmental input

Which of the following is NOT a part of the study of child development?

environmental stability through the lifespan

The sense of belonging to an ethnic group is known as:

ethnic identity

Ethnicity-related messages communicated to children by their parents are also called:

ethnic socialization

In contemporary hunter-gatherer societies, children tend to learn through:

everyday activities

Wayne is trying to figure out how to reach the cookie jar on the top shelf in the kitchen. To do so, he needs to figure out what object is high enough for him to reach the counter and sturdy enough to hold him. His problem-solving in this situation is an example of:

everyday problem-solving.

Higher-level cognitive processes, such as aspects of cognition associated with supervising and controlling lower-level cognitive processes are called:

executive function

According to Baumrind, permissive parents:

exert little explicit control over their children's behavior.

Jennifer lives with her mother, father, husband, and daughter. Jennifer lives in a(n) ____________ family.

extended

As large numbers of individuals migrated from rural areas to newly industrialized cities, family structure changed from ____________ to ____________, according to historian Philippe Ariès.

extended families, nuclear families

A rubella infection during the first 3 months of pregnancy may result in birth defects including all of the following except:

facial deformities

Children with autism spectrum disorder tested on false belief tasks:

fail to pass the false belief task, regardless of their age.

What is a technique used to assess children's theory of mind where children are tested on their understanding of either stories in which a character is fooled into believing something that is not true or of situations in which they themselves have been tricked?

false-belief tasks

Folic acid is important to ensure proper development of the:

fetus's neural tube

At the age of 5 years, Veronica demonstrates her developing ____________ by printing simple letters and demonstrates her ____________ by riding her new scooter.

fine motor skills; gross motor skills

The soft spots on infants' skulls are known as:

fontanels

The ability to think about the mental states of other people in relatively adult-like ways typically appears during the ____________ year of life.

fourth

The _____ coordinates planning and goal setting.

frontal lobes of the cortex

Cognitive structures that guide the ways children interpret gender-relevant information are called:

gender schemas

The process of meiosis produces:

germ cells

Which period of prenatal development begins at conception?

germinal

Relational aggression is MOST likely to be displayed by:

girls

The rules that govern both the sequence of words in a sentence and the ordering of parts of words are called:

grammar

Children generally learn the meaning of written text by translating ____________ to ____________.

graphemes; phonemes

Heterozygous carriers of the sickle-cell gene:

have greater than normal resistance to malaria.

The school cut-off strategy assesses the impact of schooling by comparing children in school with children of the same age who:

have not begun school because their birthday falls before a specified cut-off date.

Which of the following skills is basic to learning to read?

hearing phonemes

According to Piaget, moral development involves a shift from ____________ morality to ____________ morality.

heteronomous; autonomous

According to information-processing theorists, short-term or working memory:

holds information temporarily and executes operations.

If Carlise has inherited the same allelic form from both of her parents, she is ____________ for a trait.

homozygous

What is a psychological process in which children try to look, act, feel, and be like significant people in their social environment?

identification

Social conventions are:

important for social coordination in a given society.

The effects of school on children's cognitive abilities can be best studied:

in cultures where schooling is available to only parts of the population.

Risk factors:

increase the probability of negative outcomes for children.

Sending a girl in sub-Saharan Africa to school:

increases the crop yield for her community

According to Erik Erikson, middle childhood is a time in which children must resolve the conflict between ____________.

industry and inferiority

Which of the following is NOT an example of how culture influences infant-feeding behaviors?

infant neurological development

A criticism of traditional Piagetian tasks is that:

infants may have underlying representational competencies that they are unable to express through their performance on the tasks.

As parents participate in creating stories that become part of a child's autobiographical memory, they:

influence what the child remembers and may also embellish or exaggerate the stories.

Current research on infant temperament indicates that temperament is:

influenced by a variety of factors

Little Brandon is thinking to himself what he needs to do in order to brush his teeth by himself. What is this called?

inner speech

Co-sleeping is a common practice across the world. It fits well with which of the following culturally valued long-term goal(s) for development?

interdependence and reliance on others

A mental model that children construct as a result of their experiences with their caregivers and that they use to guide their interactions with their caregivers and others is called a(n):

internal working model

According to Freud, children begin to feel guilt once they have:

internalized adult standards

Tertiary circular reactions differ from earlier forms of circular reactions because they:

involve deliberate varying of action sequences.

in newborns, rooting:

is a reflex that causes the head to turn in the direction of a touch on the cheek.

According to information-processing theorists, long-term memory:

is a relatively permanent storehouse of knowledge and strategies.

The ability to recognize themselves in the mirror:

is demonstrated by human infants beginning at about 18 months of age.

During the first two years of life, the person who usually looms largest in the child's world:

is the mother.

American mothers argue that sleeping alone is important for an infant because:

it promotes independence in the infant.

The store of information that children can draw on to relate new memories to is their:

knowledge base

Children change from babbling to pronouncing words at about what age?

late in the first year

Poor maternal nutrition can lead to all of the following risks to the fetus, EXCEPT:

later risk of obesity

Memory strategies:

lead to better memory performance

MOST genetic or chromosomal abnormalities present at conception:

lead to early miscarriages

Researchers interested in children's cognitive development would MOST likely study how children:

learn language

A study found that reciprocal teaching:

led to improved reading scores, showing the greatest improvement compared to either explicit instruction or modeling.

By 2 ½ years of age, children's bodies have changed dramatically in appearance and proportions. What is the primary cause of this change?

lengthening of the bones of the arms and legs through ossification

The effect of Itard's work with Victor was that Victor:

made rapid progress at first but never learned to speak or interact with others normally.

Infants are able to see objects about 12 inches away. This allows them to _____, which aids attachment between mother and child.

make eye contact

Analysis of social stereotypes in the content of children's television programming reveals that:

male characters are more likely to play more active and visible roles than female characters.

A ____________ tool is easy to observe because it exists "out there" in the world.

material

Ethnography is the study of the:

meanings of behaviors in light of cultural activities and expectations.

Highly specific mental faculties associated with particular domains of environmental input are referred to as:

mental modules

The process by which the zygote creates new somatic cells is called:

mitosis

Within a social-learning view of identification, ____________ is the process by which children observe and imitate individuals of the same sex as themselves.

modeling

Some evidence that 3-year-old children can engage in decentered thinking comes from their performance on:

modifications of standard Piagetian tasks, such as in the "Grover" task.

Children who are judged to be securely attached at 12 months are ____________ likely to engage in positive play behaviors in the preschool years than children who were insecurely attached as infants.

more

The basic unit of meaning in language is called a:

morpheme

Erikson described preschool-aged children as:

motivated to learn about and participate in the world around them.

Infants' ability to integrate information perceived by more than one sensory system is known as:

multimodal perception

What is the insulating material that forms a sheath around certain axons and speeds the transmission of nerve impulses from one neuron to the next?

myelin

Friendships provide children with all of the following EXCEPT:

neglected sociometric status

Parenting that includes a mixture of high parental control, physical restraint, punishment, and warm affection is called:

no-nonsense parenting

When compared to dual-language learning children, monolingual children:

notice multiple images in an ambiguous figure at a later age.

Jason is a single father who lives with his two children. This family would be considered a(n) ____________ family.

nuclear

Piaget believed that children's inability to keep two aspects of a problem in mind was at the heart of all of the following characteristics of thinking in early childhood EXCEPT:

object permanence

Piaget's notion of object permanence refers to the idea that:

objects exist even when out of sight.

An infant's smiles are truly social when they:

occur in response to, and elicit the smiles of, another person.

Children who display a mastery-oriented motivational pattern are:

optimistic and believe they can do better on tasks if they try harder.

Chris is trying to remember the names of the bones of the body for her anatomy class by mentally chunking the bones into groups by their locations in the body. Chris is using what mental strategy?

organizational

Which of the following seems to increase sibling fighting?

parental fighting

A process in which infants lose their innate abilities to detect certain sensory features because those features do not occur very often in their environments is called:

perceptual narrowing

What is the process through which the sound of a familiar word serves as an anchor for learning new words?

perceptual scaffolding

Baillargeon and her colleagues studied infant reasoning about nonvisible objects. These studies relied on all of the following except:

perseveration

The AIDS virus may be passed from mother to baby through all of the following except:

physical contact

Thinking about what the self might be like in the future is referred to as the:

possible self

Organized, reciprocal interaction between an infant and caregiver is known as:

primary intersubjectivity

A rationale for arguing for a nature-driven explanation for language development is that it is:

quick, flexible, and seemingly effortless.

Researchers concerned about health issues related to obesity look at children's actual weight gain, as well as the:

rate at which children gain their weight.

During childbirth, analgesics:

reduce the perception of paint

According to Piaget, behaviors occurring when an infant is in the first substage of the sensorimotor period are:

reflexive

An infant learns that pulling her mother's hair causes her mother to make an amusing vocal sound. The mother's "ouch" can be considered a(n) ____________ for hair pulling.

reinforcement

Baumrind found that children's behavior is:

related to parenting styles.

The coordination of infant and caregiver sleeping and eating routines is:

related to well-being when coordinated more smoothly.

Actions that threaten the relationship and social standing of peers are called:

relational aggression

The rate of underweight babies is ____________, whereas the rate of overweight babies is ____________.

remaining stable; increasing

Personal spheres are:

rules that govern a child's decision making in terms of his own preferences.

The basic units of psychological functioning in Piaget's theory are:

schemas

Compared to children with no friends, children with best friends tend to:

score higher on measures of self-esteem.

According to Bowlby's attachment theory, the mother serves as a:

secure base

Children are more likely to have high self-esteem when their parents:

set clearly defined limits

When they hear sounds from outside their mother's bodies, fetuses may:

show a change in heart rate

At birth children:

show a preference for language over other sounds.

Utterances such as, "Sarah eated fast":

show that children have some grasp of grammatical rules.

Social development involves:

simultaneously learning about one's society and one's own unique thoughts and feelings.

Which of the following is an example of an affiliative behavior that 3-year-old Vickie might engage in?

smiling at another child who has just arrived for school

Erikson departed from Freud's basic ideas about development by arguing that:

social and cultural factors play critical roles in development.

The moral domain, the social conventional domain, and the personal domain each have their own distinct rules that vary in how broadly they are applied, and what happens when they are broken. This is a reference to:

social domain theory

Now that Zach is in middle childhood, he spends more time with his friends and peers and less time with his parents. This reflects a process of:

social reorientation.

Make-believe play, in which two or more participants enact a variety of social roles, is called:

sociodramatic play

When a child is able to regulate her emotions, discern other people's emotions, use self-regulatory strategies, and understand the role that emotions play in social relationships, she is demonstrating:

socioemotional competence.

Babies who have the opportunity to practice motor skills develop those skills:

sooner than children who do not practice

Sam is very good at mentally rotating objects in order to solve problems. What kind of intelligence is this?

spatial intelligence

Which of the following is NOT a lobe in the cerebral cortex?

spatial lobe

The violations-of-expectations procedure relies on infants' tendencies to:

stare at events that they consider to be surprising.

The case of Genie, a child who lived in conditions of isolation and neglect for more than 11 years:

suggests that participation in a normal social environment is essential to the process of language acquisition.

In Freudian terms, a mental structure that represents the authority of the social group is called the:

superego

The process of using grammar to learn the meaning of new words is known as:

synaptic bootstrapping

An infant's characteristic modes of responding to the environment are known as:

temperament

The earliest visible manifestations of personality, such as patterns of responsivity, are referred to as:

temperamental traits.

The form of external genitalia is determined by the presence or absence of:

testosterone

All of the following are characteristic of the thought processes of middle childhood, according to Piaget, EXCEPT:

the ability to manipulate abstract ideas and symbols.

During the second stage of labor, ____________, while during the third stage of labor, ____________.

the baby emerges from the vagina; the placenta is delivered.

A fetus at eight weeks of gestation will be able to respond to tactile information from all of the following except:

the father

Which stage of labor may last 14 hours or longer?

the first

The similarities and differences between people ultimately are caused by:

the interaction between cultural and genetic influences.

According to Piaget, early childhood is a time of transition between:

the overtly physical schemas of infancy and the ability to use mental operations in middle childhood.

According to Piaget, infants' earliest schemas are:

the reflexes they have at birth.

Which would be MOST difficult to study using a cross-sectional design?

the sequence of developing memory skills in individual subjects

Child development can be defined as:

the sequence of physical, intellectual, social, and emotional changes that children undergo.

Which of the following is an example of a phoneme?

the sound of /t/

One mechanism through which language is acquired, according to a biological explanation of language acquisition, would be:

the triggering of the language acquisition device.

Naïve psychology refers to:

the understanding of the relationship between mental states and behavior.

Which of the following concepts is MOST closely associated with "socialization"?

the values of society

A comparison of how long babies look at different stimuli is the basic feature of:

the visual preference technique

In Piaget and Inhelder's classic "three-mountain problems," where preoperational children are asked to identify the doll's perspective, they almost always choose the picture that corresponds to:

their point of view

The ability to think about other people's mental states that develops in a child's fourth or fifth year of life is referred to as:

theory of mind

Concrete operations are called "concrete" because:

they are performed on real objects.

Investigations of young children's biological understandings suggest that:

they identify important differences between living and non-living kinds.

Erikson suggested that infants become attached to those:

they trust

Gestational age refers to the:

time that has passed from conception to birth

Cross-cultural differences in performance on conservation tasks suggest:

training, familiar materials, and use of native language are important contributors to children's performance on standardized tests.

In Pavlov's studies, the salivation in response to food was the:

unconditional response

Children demonstrate that they can recognize themselves in the mirror when they:

use mirror images to find spots of color placed on their faces.

School problem solving supports:

use of abstract reasoning

Implantation of the blastocyst occurs in the:

uterus

On its way to the ____________, the zygote travels through the ____________.

uterus; fallopian tube

Natalie's mom is late getting her ready for preschool in the morning. As a result, she urges Natalie to just wear her pajamas to school. Natalie is upset and confused, suggesting that she considers wearing pajamas out of the house to be a:

violation of a moral rule

Which of the following senses is the LEAST well-developed at birth?

vision

When event A and event B are positively correlated:

we can never be certain if A and B are causally related.

Studies of children adopted from unstimulating orphanages clearly showed that the children:

were more likely to recover if they were adopted by 6 months of age.

The single cell that is the foundation for all of the cells that a child will have at birth is called a:

zygote


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Non-clausal units (Conversational grammar 2)

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Chapter 32: The Toddler and Family

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