Psychology 200 Chapter 3

3.1 The Newborn: Learning Objectives

How do reflexes help newborns interact with the world?
How do we determine whether a baby is healthy and adjusting to life outside the uterus?
What behavioral states are common among newborns?
What are the different features of temperament? Do they change

The Newborn's Reflexes

Reflexes: the newborn is born with unlearned responses triggered by specific stimuli
Certain reflexes have survival value
rooting, sucking, eye blinks
Other reflexes are developmental precursors to later voluntary motor behaviors
stepping a precursor to w

Assessing the Newborn

The five Apgar scores
1. Heart rate 2. Respiration
3. Muscle tone 4. Reflexes
5. Skin tone
Each scored from 0 to 2; then summed
Good physical condition: total of 7+
Needs special attention: total of 4-6
Life-threatening: total of 3 or less

Assessing the Newborn (cont'd)

Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale (NBAS)
Includes 28 behavioral and 18 reflex items
Assesses four systems
Autonomic: body regulation (e.g., breathing)
Motor: activity level and control of body
State: maintaining states (e.g., alertness)
Social: interac

The Newborn's States

Alert inactivity: calm, eyes open and attentive; deliberately inspecting environment
Waking activity: open but unfocused eyes; uncoordinated motions
Crying: cries vigorously; motion is agitated and uncoordinated
Sleeping: eyes closed; degree of activity a

Crying

Basic cry
Starts softly and builds in volume and intensity
Often seen when the child is hungry
Mad cry
More intense and louder
Pain cry
Starts with a loud wail, followed by a long pause, then gasping

Sleeping

Newborns sleep an average of 16-18 hours/day
Sleep cycles
Newborns: 4-hour cycle; 3 hours sleep and 1 hour awake
By 3 to 4 months: 5-to-6-hour cycle
By 6 months: sleep 10 to 12 hours at night
REM sleep
50% of newborn sleep
25% by 12 months

Co-sleeping

The practice of sleeping in the same room or bed with the child
Much more common in cultures valuing interdependence than independence
Research shows no evidence of increased dependence
Co-sleeping has the advantage of avoiding elaborate sleep-time ritual

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS

SIDS: sudden, inexplicable death of a healthy baby
Risk factors
Premature birth and low birth weight
Parental smoking
Child overheating and sleeping on stomach
African-American infants (often sleep on stomach)
Reducing risk? Sleeping on back or sides

Dimensions of Temperament

Temperament: consistent styles or patterns of infant behavior
Number of temperament dimensions still debated (ranging from 2 to 9)
Rothbart's (2007) three dimensions indicate how much a child
is generally happy, active, vocal, and seeks stimulation (surge

Rothbart's Dimensions of Temperament

Three dimensions are not independent
High effortful control predicts high surgency/extroversion, but low negative affect
Scores during infancy predict personality in adolescents and adults

Hereditary and Environmental Contributions to Temperament

Heredity and twin studies
Identical twins are more similar in temperament than are fraternal twins
Heredity influences negative affect more than other temperament dimensions
Heredity contributes more to temperament in childhood than during infancy

Hereditary and Environmental Contributions to Temperament (cont'd)

Environment
Asian babies are less emotional, whereas Russian babies show more fear and negative affect compared to Euro-American babies
Parental characteristics influence temperament
Parental responsiveness reduces infant emotionality
Depressed mothers ha

Hereditary and Environmental Contributions to Temperament (cont'd)

Heredity and environment interact
Temperament influences environment's effect on children
Fearful children cheated more if disciplined with power assertion, but less if parents were nurturing and supportive
Temperament influences how others treat the chil

Stability of Temperament

Studies suggest that temperament tends to be somewhat stable from infancy through adulthood
Temperament predisposes, but does not always guarantee, later personality characteristics
Parents can nurture children to behave in ways somewhat different from th

3.2 Physical Development: Learning Objectives

How do height and weight change from birth to two years of age?
What nutrients do young children need? How are they best provided?
What are the consequences of malnutrition? How can it be treated?
What are nerve cells, and how are they organized in the br

Growth of the Body

Growth is more rapid in infancy than during any other period after birth
Infants double their weight by three months
Infants triple their weight by one year
Average is not the same as normal
Children of the same age can vary greatly in their heights and w

FIG 3.2 Boys and girls grew taller and heavier from birth to 3 years of age but the range of normal heights and weights is quite wide.

FIG 3.2 Boys and girls grew taller and heavier from birth to 3 years of age but the range of normal heights and weights is quite wide.

Nutrition and Growth

Rapid growth requires young babies to consume large amounts of calories relative to body weight
Breast-feeding is the best way to ensure proper nourishment
Bottle-feeding has advantages and disadvantages
All family members can enjoy intimacy with bottle
F

Nutrition and Feeding

New foods should be introduced one at a time
Growth slows at two years and children become finicky eaters
Finicky eating may have survival value
Toddlers do not know which foods are safe and stick with familiar foods
Virtually all finicky eaters receive a

Malnutrition

World-wide about 1 in 4 children under age five are malnourished (UNICEF, 2006)
Malnourished children develop more slowly
Malnutrition is most damaging during infancy due to rapid growth rate
Giving malnourished children adequate diets is challenging beca

The Emerging Nervous System

The brain and the rest of the nervous system consist of cells known as neurons
Neurons consist of a soma, dendrites, the axon, and terminal buttons
Terminal buttons release chemicals called neurotransmitters

FIG 3.4 A nerve cell includes dendrites that receive information, a cell body has life-sustaining machinery, and, for sending information, an axon that ends in terminal buttons.

FIG 3.4 A nerve cell includes dendrites that receive information, a cell body has life-sustaining machinery, and, for sending information, an axon that ends in terminal buttons.

The Brain

The brain has 50 to 100 billion neurons
Cerebral cortex: the wrinkled surface of the brain
Hemispheres: the two halves of the brain
Corpus callosum: the thick band of fibers connecting the two hemispheres

The Making of the Working Brain

The brain weighs about three-quarters of a pound at birth - about 25% of an adult brain
At around three years of age, the child's brain is about 80% of an adult's brain weight

Emerging Brain Structures

At 3 weeks after conception, the neural plate, a flat structure of cells, forms
By 28 weeks after conception, the brain has all the neurons it will ever have
In the 4th month of prenatal development, axons begin to form the fatty sheath, myelin
Helps spee

Growth of a Specialized Brain: Brain-Mapping Methods

Methods to study origins and time course of brain specialization
Studying children with brain damage
Measuring the brain's electrical activity through electrodes place on scalp (EEG or electroencephalogram)
Using magnetic fields to track brain blood flow

Five General Principles of Brain Specialization

Specialization is early in development
Ex.: newborns' left hemisphere generates higher electricity in response to speech
Specialization takes two specific forms
Specialized areas become more focused and less diffuse
Stimuli triggering brain activity becom

Five General Principles of Brain Specialization (cont'd)

Different brain systems specialize at different rates
Ex.: systems for sensory and perceptual processes specialize before those for higher-order processes
4. Environmental stimulation is necessary for successful specialization
experience-expectant growth

Five General Principles of Brain Specialization (cont'd)

Plasticity is a benefit of the immature brain's lack of specialization
Atypical experiences may disrupt normal course of development (e.g., brain damage disrupting speech)
Plasticity: brain is very flexible, allowing recovery of function, especially in yo

Brain Specialization Principle: Experience-Expectant vs. Dependent-Growth

Experience-expectant growth
All human brains require exposure to experiences common to all individuals (e.g., exposure to faces) to fine-tune their circuits and to have different regions specialize
Experience-dependent growth
Brain circuits and regions al

3.3 Early Motor Skills: Learning Objectives

What are the component skills involved in learning to walk? At what age do infants master them?
How do infants learn to coordinate the use of their hands?

FIG 3.5 Locomotor skills improve rapidly in the 15 months after birth and progress can be measured by many developmental milestones.

FIG 3.5 Locomotor skills improve rapidly in the 15 months after birth and progress can be measured by many developmental milestones.

Locomotion

By 7 months, infants can sit alone
Toddling: at around 14 months, toddlers may stand alone briefly and walk without assistance
Dynamic systems theory
Instead of simple maturation, motor development involves many distinct skills that are organized and reor

Posture and Balance

Infants are "top-heavy" and easily lose their balance
Within a few months, infants use inner ear and visual cues to adjust posture
Infants must relearn balance each time they achieve new postures

Stepping

Many infants move their legs alternately in a stepping-like motion as early as 6-7 months
Infants use environmental cues to judge whether a surface is suited to walking (e.g., flat vs. bumpy)

Coordinating Skills

Walking skills must be learned separately and then integrated with others
Differentiation: mastery of component skills
Integration: combining components into the sequence needed to accomplish the task
Unsupported, independent walking occurs at about 12 to

Cultural Impact on Motor Development

Some cultural practices encourage certain skills early and others discourage them
Ex.: parents in Africa carry children piggyback style, which promotes walking at earlier ages than in the U.S.
Ex.: in Paraguay, mothers constantly carry toddlers, delaying

Fine Motor Skills

Fine motor skills are associated with grasping, holding, and manipulating objects
At 4 months, infants clumsily reach for objects
By 5 months, they coordinate movement of the two hands
By 2-3 years, children can use zippers but not buttons
Tying shoes is

Handedness

a strong preference for using one hand or the other that develops between 3 and 5 years of age

3.4 Perception: Learning Objectives

Are infants able to smell, to taste, and to experience pain?
Can infants hear? How do they use sound to locate objects?
How well can infants see? Can they see color and depth?
How do infants coordinate information between different sensory modalities, suc

Coming to Know the World: Smell and Taste Perception

Perception: brain processes receiving, selecting, modifying, and organizing sensory inputs
Newborns have keen senses of smell and taste
Odors: they distinguish pleasant from unpleasant, or familiar from unfamiliar (e.g., mother's breast or perfume)
Taste:

Coming to Know the World: Touch and Pain

Babies react to touch with reflexes and other movements
In reaction to painful stimuli, babies manifest the pain cry - a sudden, high-pitched wail - and they are not easily soothed

Coming to Know the World: Hearing

Startle reactions suggest that infants are sensitive to sound
Infants hear less well than adults
They best hear pitches in the range of human speech (neither high nor low pitches) and differentiate consonants from vowels
They prefer pleasant more than unp

Coming to Know the World: Seeing

Newborns respond to light and track moving objects with their eyes
Visual acuity (clarity of vision) is the smallest pattern that can be distinguished dependably
Infants at 1 month see at 20 feet what adults see at 200-400 feet
By 1 year, infants' visual

Coming to Know the World: Color

Cones: sets of neurons located along the retina at the back of the eye, each specialized to one of the three light wavelengths
Newborns perceive few colors
3- to 4-month-old infants can perceive colors similarly to adults

Coming to Know the World: Depth Perception

Visual cliff research
6-week-olds react with interest to differences in depth (heart rate deceleration)
By 7 months, they show more fear than interest to the cliff's deep end (heart rate acceleration and refusal to cross the deep side)
Fear of depth seems

Coming to Know the World: Depth Perception (cont'd)

Seven cues adults use to infer depth
Cues Closer compared to distant objects...
Kinetic cues ... appear larger while moving
Visual expansion ... fill more of the retina
Motion parallax ... move faster
Retinal disparity ... yield greater disparity
Sound ..

Coming to Know the World: Depth Perception (cont'd)

Few-week old babies use kinetic, visual expansion, and motion parallax weeks after birth to see depth
Infants use sound to accurately gauge depth
4- to 6-month-old babies use retinal disparity
7-month-old babies use linear perspective and texture gradient

Coming to Know the World: Perceiving Objects

Perceiving objects involves interpreting patterns of lines, textures, and colors
Object perception is limited in newborns, but develops rapidly in the first few months
By 4 months, infants use several cues to discern that a stimulus is an object
elements

Perceiving Faces

Newborns prefer to look at moving faces, suggesting an innate attraction to them
By 4 weeks, infants track all moving stimuli, including faces and nonfaces
Before 6 months, infants have a prototype of a face that includes both human and nonhuman faces
Bet

Integrating Sensory Information

Infants visually recognize objects they only touched previously
Infants soon begin to perceive the link between visual images and sounds
Intersensory redundancy: simultaneously available multimodal sensory information (e.g., sight, sound, touch)
Infants p

3.5 Becoming Self-Aware: Learning Objectives

When do children begin to realize that they exist?
What are toddlers' and preschoolers' self-concepts like?
When do preschool children begin to acquire a theory of mind?

Origins of Self-Concept

Self-awareness
Mirror test: red rouge surreptitiously rubbed on child's nose; child placed in front of mirror and behavior is observed
9-month-old infants smile at the image in the mirror but do not seem to recognize it as themselves
By 15-24 months, infa

Origins of Self-Concept (cont'd)

Toddlers look more at photographs of themselves than other children
Toddlers refer to themselves by name and use personal pronouns "I" or "me"
They use "I" in the present and in the past, showing awareness of the self's continuity over time
Toddlers under

Theory of Mind (TOM)

Theory of mind: na�ve understanding of the relationship between mind and behavior
Develops in three phases (Wellman, 1993, 2002)
Phase 1: by 2 years, aware of desires; speak of wants and likes
Understand that people have desires and that desires cause beh

Theory of Mind (TOM) (cont'd)

Phase 3: by 4 years, know that behavior can be based on beliefs about events, even if belief is false
False belief tasks
Child hears story about Sally, who puts ball in the basket and leaves
Child told the ball is moved from the basket to the box, which S

Theory of Mind (TOM) (cont'd)

How does TOM develop?
Could reflect expanding mental state language and grammatical skills
Might be due to interactions with others, who provide insights into people with different mental states, perspectives, feelings, intentions, moods
TOM and autism
Au

Theory of Mind (TOM) (cont'd)

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) (cont'd)
Awkward social interactions with other people
Do not follow rules governing social interactions
Symptoms emerge around 18 to 24 months
Diagnosed in 1 out of 200-300 U.S. children
80% of diagnoses are in boys
Is heri

Theory of Mind (TOM) (cont'd)

ASD and TOM
Very slowly grasp false belief
Some argue they may not have a TOM
mindblindness is a defining feature of ASD
Some attribute mindblindedness to other deficits
cannot inhibit irrelevant actions
have problems shifting smoothly between actions
Som