Perspective nature and nurture

    Subdecks (3)

    Cards (77)

    • Human Development
      The scientific study of the systematic processes of change and stability in people
    • Life-Span Development

      The concept of human development as a lifelong process, which can be studied scientifically
    • Life-Span Perspective

      • Views development as lifelong, multidimensional, multidirectional, plastic, multidisciplinary, and contextual, and as a process that involves growth, maintenance, and regulation of loss
    • Domains of Development
      • Physical Development
      • Cognitive Development
      • Psychosocial Development
    • Social Construction
      A concept or practice that is an invention of a particular culture or society
    • Stability-Change Issue
      The degree to which early traits and characteristics persist through life or change
    • Continuity-Discontinuity
      The degree to which development involves either gradual, cumulative change (continuity) or distinct stages (discontinuity)
    • Maturation
      The unfolding of natural sequence of physical change and behavior patterns
    • Behavioral Genetics
      The scientific study of the extent to which genetic and environmental differences among people and animals are responsible for differences in their traits
    • Heritability
      The proportion of all the variability in the trait within a large sample of people that can be linked to genetic differences among those individuals
    • Gregor Mendel studied the heredity in plants
    • Selective Breeding
      Involves attempting to breed animals for a particular trait to determine whether the trait is heritable
    • Genes contribute to such attributes as activity level, emotionality, aggressiveness, and sex drive in rats, mice, and chickens
    • Types of Studies
      • Twin Studies
      • Adoption Studies
      • Family Studies
    • Concordance Rate
      The percentage of pairs of people studied in which if one member of a pair displays the trait, the other does too
    • Genes turn on and off in patterned ways throughout the lifespan (Epigenetics)
    • Gene-Environment Interaction
      The effects of genes depend on what kind of environment we experience, and how we respond to the environment depends on what genes we have
    • Intelligence is strongly influenced by heredity, but is also affected by parental stimulation, education, peer influence, and others
    • Factors that contribute to individual differences in emotionality
      • Genes
      • Shared Environmental Influences
      • Nonshared Environmental Influences
    • Types of Gene-Environment Correlations
      • Passive Gene-Environment
      • Evocative Gene-Environment
      • Active Gene-Environment
    • Heredity
      Inborn traits and characteristics provided by the child's parents (Nature)
    • Environment
      Influences stems from the outside body, starting from conception throughout life (Nurture)
    • Individual Differences
      People differ in gender, height, weight, and body build; in health and energy level, etc.
    • Contexts of Development
      • Family
      • Socioeconomic Status
      • Culture
      • Gender
      • History
    • Normative Influences

      Biological or environmental events that affect many or most people in a society in a similar ways and events that touch only certain individuals
    • Types of Normative Influences
      • Normative Age-Graded Influences
      • Normative History-Graded Influences
    • Historical Generation

      Group of people who experience the event at a formative time in their lives
    • Age Cohort
      Group of people born at about the same time
    • Nonnormative
      Unusual events that have major impact on individual lives because they disturb the expected sequence of the life cycle
    • Imprinting
      Instinctively follow the first moving object they see
    • Critical Period
      Specific time when a given event, or its absence, has a specific impact on development
    • Sensitive Periods
      When developing person is especially responsive to certain kind of experience
    • Plasticity
      Modifiability of performance
    • Theory
      Set of logically related concepts or statements that seek to describe and explain development and to predict the kinds of behavior that might occur under certain conditions
    • Hypothesis
      Explanations or predications that can be tested by further research
    • John Locke
      Tabula Rasa
    • Jean Jacques Rousseau
      Children are born "noble savages" who develop according to their own positive natural tendencies if not corrupted by society
    • Mechanistic Model
      People are like machines that react to environmental input
    • Organismic Model
      People as active, growing organisms that set their own development in motion; initiate events, and do not just react
    • Continuous
      Gradual and incremental