Psychology 200 Lifespan Developmental Psychology
systematic observation
watching people and carefully recording what they do or say
continuity-discontinuity issue
whether a particular developmental phenomenon represents a smooth progression throughout the life span (continuity) or a series of abrupt shifts (discontinuity)
universal versus context-specific development issue
whether there is just one path of development or several paths
biopsychosocial framework
a useful way to organize the biological, psychological, and sociocultural forces on human development
formal operational thought (Piaget)
adolescence and beyond - adolescent or adult thinks abstractly, deals with hypothetical situations, and speculates about what may be possible
correlation coefficient
an expression of the strength and direction of a relation between two variables
theory
an organized set of ideas that is designed to explain development
operant conditioning
learning paradigm in which the consequences of a behavior determine whether a behavior is repeated in the future
imitation of observational learning
learning that occurs by simply watching how others behave
life-course perspective
description of how various generations experience the biological, psychological, and sociocultural forces of development in their respective historical contexts
longitudinal study
longitudinal study research design in which the same individuals are observed or tested repeatedly at different points in their lives
qualitative research
method that involves gaining in-depth understanding of human behavior and what governs it
selective optimization with compensation (SOC) model
model in which three processes (selection, optimization, and compensation) form a system of behavioral action that generates and regulates development and aging
multidirectionality
development involves both growth and decline; as people grow in one area they may lose in another and at different rates
sequential design
developmental research design based on cross-sectional and longitudinal designs
historical context
each of us develops within a particular set of circumstances determined by the historical time in which we are born and the culture in which we grow up
exosystem
social settings that a person may not experience firsthand but that still influence development
self-reports
people's answer to questions about the topic of interest
self-efficacy
people's beliefs about their own abilities and talents
microsystem
the people and objects in an individual's immediate environment
preoperational thought stage (Piaget)
2 to 6 years - child learns how to use symbols such as words and numbers to represent aspects of the world but relates to the world only through his or her perspective
concrete operational thought (Piaget)
7 years to early adolescence - child understands and applies logical operations to experiences provided they are focused on the here and now
environmental press
demands put on people by the environment
psychosocial theory
Erikson's proposal that personality development is determined by the interaction of an internal maturational plan and external societal demands
punishment
a consequence that decreases the future likelihood of the behavior that it follows
reinforcement
a consequence that increases the future likelihood of the behavior that it follows
competence
a person's abilities
sample
a subset of the population
experiment
a systematic way of manipulating the key factor(s) that the investigator thinks causes a particular behavior
meta-analysis
a tool that enables researches to synthesize the results of many studies to estimate relations between variables
sensorimotor stage (Piaget)
birth to 2 years - infant's knowledge of the world is based on senses and motor skills; by the end of the period, uses mental representation
populations
broad groups of people that are of interest to researchers
validity
extent to which a measure actually assesses what researchers think it does
reliability
extent to which a measure provides a consistent index of a characteristic
epigentic principle
in Erikson's theory, the idea that each psychosocial strength has its own special period of particular importance
multiple causation
how we develop results from the biological, psychological, sociocultural, and life-cycle forces that we mentioned previously
biological forces
include all genetic and health-related factors that affect development
psychological forces
include all internal perceptual, cognitive, emotional, and personality factors that affect development
sociocultural forces
include interpersonal, societal, cultural, and ethnic factors that affect development
correlational study
investigation looking at relations between variables as they exist naturally in the world
plasticity
one's capacity is not predetermined or carved in stone, many skills can be learned or improved with practice, even in late life
cohort effects
problem with cross-sectional designs in which differences between age groups (cohorts) may result as easily from environmental events as from developmental processes
mesosystem
provides connections across microsystems
life-cycle forces
reflect differences in how the same event affects people of different ages
cross-sectional study
study in which developmental differences are identified by testing people of different ages
structured observations
technique in which a researcher creates a setting that is likely to elicit the behavior of interest
naturalistic observation
technique in which people are observed as they behave spontaneously in some real-life situation
dependent variable
the behavior being observed
macrosystem
the cultures and subcultures in which the microsystem, mesosystem, and exosystem are embedded
nature-nurture issue
the degree to which genetic or hereditary influences (nature) and experiential or environmental influences (nurture) determine the kind of person you are
independent variable
the factor being manipulated
human development
the multidisciplinary study of how people change and how they remain the same over time
neuroscience
the study of the brain and nervous system, especially in terms of brain-behavior relationships
psychodynamic theories
theories proposing that development is largely determined by how well people resolve conflicts they face at different ages
ecological theory
theory based on idea that human development is inseparable from the environmental contexts in which a person develops (Bronfenbrenner)
information-processing theory
theory proposing that human cognition consists of mental hardware and mental software
life-span perspective
view that human development is mutiply determined and cannot by understood within the scope of a single framework