Chapter Review: Developing Through the Life Span

Test yourself by taking a moment to answer each of these Learning Objective Questions (repeated here from within the chapter). Research suggests that trying to answer these questions on your own will improve your long-term memory of the concepts (McDaniel et al., 2009).

Question 3.13

What are the three major issues studied by developmental psychologists?

Developmental psychologists study physical, cognitive, and social change throughout the life span with a focus on three major issues:

  • Nature and nurture—how our genetic inheritance (our nature) interacts with our experiences (our nurture) to influence our development.
  • Continuity and stages—what parts of development are gradual and continuous and what parts change abruptly in separate stages.
  • Stability and change—which traits persist through life and which change as we age.


Prenatal Development and the Newborn

Question 3.14

How does conception occur, and what are chromosomes, DNA, genes, and the genome? How do genes and the environment interact?

  • At conception, one sperm cell fuses with one egg cell.
  • Genes are the basic units of heredity that make up chromosomes, the threadlike coils of DNA.
  • A genome is the shared genetic profile that distinguishes each species.
  • Heredity and environment interact to influence development.
  • The field of epigenetics studies how genes guide development as they are expressed in particular environments.

Question 3.15

How does life develop before birth, and how do teratogens put prenatal development at risk?

  • From conception to 2 weeks, the zygote is in a period of rapid cell development.
  • By 6 weeks, the embryo's body organs begin to form and function.
  • By 9 weeks, the fetus is recognizably human.
  • Identical twins (monozygotic twins) develop from a single fertilized egg that splits into two; fraternal twins (dizygotic twins) develop from separate fertilized eggs.
  • Teratogens are potentially harmful agents that can pass through the placental screen and interfere with normal development, as happens with fetal alcohol syndrome.

Question 3.16

How do twin and adoption studies help us understand the effects of nature and nurture?

  • Studies of separated identical twins allow researchers to maintain the same genes while testing the effects of different home environments. Studies of adoptive families let researchers maintain the same home environment while studying the effects of genetic differences.

Question 3.17

What are some of the newborn’s abilities and traits?

  • Newborns' sensory systems and reflexes aid their survival and social interactions with adults.
  • Newborns smell and hear well, see what they need to see, and begin using their sensory equipment to learn.
  • Inborn temperament—emotional excitability—heavily influences our developing personality.


Infancy and Childhood

Question 3.18

How do the brain and motor skills develop during infancy and childhood?

  • Most brain cells form before birth. With maturation and experience, their interconnections multiply rapidly and become more complex after birth. A pruning process strengthens heavily used links and weakens unused ones, and we seem to have a critical period for some skills, such as language.
  • Complex motor skills—sitting, standing, walking—develop in a predictable sequence. Timing may vary with individual maturation and with culture.
  • We have few conscious memories of events occurring before age 4, a blank space in our conscious memory psychologists call infantile amnesia.

Question 3.19

How did Piaget view the developmental stages of a child’s mind, and how does current thinking about cognitive development differ?

  • In his theory of cognitive development, Jean Piaget proposed that children actively construct and modify an understanding of the world through the processes of assimilation and accommodation. They form schemas that help them organize their experiences.
  • Piaget believed children construct an understanding of the world by interacting with it while moving through four cognitive stages:
    • Sensorimotor stage–first two years; object permanence develops.
    • Preoperational stage—about age 2 to 6 or 7; preschoolers are egocentric but begin to develop a theory of mind (except for those with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), whose theory of mind is impaired).
    • Concrete operational stage—6 or 7 to 11 years; mastery of conservation and simple math.
    • Formal operational stage—about age 12 and up; reasoning expands to abstract thinking.
  • Current research supports the sequence Piaget proposed, but finds young children more capable and their development more continuous.
  • Lev Vygotsky’s studies of child development focused on the ways a child’s mind grows by interacting with the social environment. Parents and other caregivers provide temporary scaffolds from which children can step to higher levels of thinking.

Question 3.20

How do the bonds of attachment form between caregivers and infants?

  • Infants develop stranger anxiety soon after object permanence.
  • Infants form attachments with caregivers who not only satisfy nutritional needs but, more importantly, who are comfortable, familiar, and responsive.

Question 3.21

Why do secure and insecure attachments matter, and how does an infant develop basic trust?

  • Attachment styles differ (secure or insecure) due to the child’s individual temperament and the responsiveness of the child's caregivers.
  • Securely attached children develop basic trust and tend to have healthier adult relationships.
  • Neglect or abuse can disrupt the attachment process and put children at risk for physical, psychological, and social problems.

Question 3.22

What are three primary parenting styles, and what outcomes are associated with each?

  • Parenting styles—authoritarian, permissive, and authoritative—reflect varying degrees of control.
  • Children with the highest self-esteem, self-reliance, and social competence tend to have authoritative parents.
  • Child-raising practices reflect both individual and cultural values.

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Adolescence

Question 3.23

What defines adolescence, and what major physical changes occur during adolescence?

  • Adolescence begins with puberty, a time of sexual maturation.
  • The brain’s frontal lobes mature during adolescence and the early twenties, enabling improved judgment, impulse control, and long-term planning.

Question 3.24

How did Piaget, Kohlberg, and later researchers describe cognitive and moral development during adolescence?

  • In Jean Piaget’s view, formal operations (abstract reasoning) develop in adolescence, and this development is the basis for moral judgment. Research indicates that these abilities begin to emerge earlier than Piaget believed.
  • Lawrence Kohlberg proposed a stage theory of moral thinking: preconventional morality (self-interest), conventional morality (gaining others’ approval or doing one’s duty), and postconventional morality (basic rights and self-defined ethical principles).
  • Kohlberg’s critics note that the postconventional level is culturally limited, representing morality only from the perspective of an individualist, middle-class society.
  • Other researchers believe that morality lies in moral intuition and moral action as well as thinking.

Question 3.25

According to Erikson, what stages—and accompanying tasks and challenges—mark our psychosocial development?

  • Erik Erikson proposed eight stages of psychosocial development across the life span.
  • Each life stage has its own psychosocial task, with the chief task of adolescence being solidifying one’s sense of self, one’s identity. This often means trying out a number of different roles. Social identity is the part of the self-concept that comes from a person’s group memberships.
  • Erikson believed we need to achieve the following challenges: trust, autonomy, initiative, competency, identity (in adolescence), intimacy (in young adulthood), generativity, and integrity.

Question 3.26

To what extent are adolescent lives shaped by parental and peer influences?

  • During adolescence, parental influence diminishes and peer influence increases, in part because of the selection effect—the tendency to choose similar others as friends.
  • Nature and nurture—genes and experiences—interact to guide our development.

Question 3.27

Does parenting matter?

  • Parents influence our manners, attitudes, values, faith, and politics.
  • Language and other behaviors are shaped by peer groups, as children adjust to fit in.

Question 3.28

What are the characteristics of emerging adulthood?

  • Emerging adulthood is the period from age 18 to the mid-twenties, when many young people in Western cultures are no longer adolescents but have not yet achieved full independence as adults.


Adulthood

Question 3.29

How do our bodies and sensory abilities change from early to late adulthood?

  • Muscular strength, reaction time, sensory abilities, and cardiac output begin to decline in the late twenties and continue to decline through middle adulthood (to age 65) and late adulthood (after 65).
  • Around age 50, menopause ends women’s period of fertility. Men do not undergo a similar sharp drop in hormone levels or fertility.
  • In late adulthood, the immune system also weakens, but good health habits help to enable better health in later life.

Question 3.30

How does memory change with age?

  • Recall begins to decline, especially for meaningless information. Recognition memory remains strong.

Question 3.31

What are adulthood’s two primary commitments, and how do chance events and the social clock influence us?

  • Adulthood’s two major commitments are love (Erikson’s intimacy—forming close relationships) and work (productive activity, or what Erikson called generativity).
  • Chance encounters affect many of our important decisions, such as our choice of romantic partners.
  • The social clock is a culture’s expected timing for social events, such as marriage, parenthood, and retirement.

Question 3.32

What factors affect our well-being in later life?

  • Most older people retain a sense of well-being, partly due to the tendency to focus more on positive emotions and memories.
  • People over 65 report as much happiness and satisfaction with life as younger people do. Many experience what Erikson called a sense of integrity— a feeling that one’s life has been meaningful.

Question 3.33

How do people vary in their responses to a loved one’s death?

  • Normal grief reactions vary widely. People do not grieve in predictable stages.
  • Immediate strong expression of grief does not purge the grief more quickly, and bereavement therapy is not significantly more effective than grieving without such aid.
  • Death of a loved one is much harder to accept when it comes before its expected time.