Uploaded by Celeste Rodriguez

Introduction to Lifespan Development Psychology

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1
Chapter 1: Introduction
to Lifespan Development
Lifespan Development: A Psychological Perspective
By Martha Lally and Suzanne Valentine-French (Published 2017)
In This Chapter:
2
◻
The lifespan Perspective
Periods of development
🞑 Theories of development
🞑
◻
Research Methods and Issues
Types of research studies
🞑 Ethical issues
🞑
What is Developmental Psychology?
3
◻
Scientific study of how people change
Multiple areas (cognition, emotional control, etc.)
🞑 Also concerned with what causes changes
🞑 May focus on specific age group or entire lifespan
🞑 May also look at how people don’t change
🞑
Key Questions?
4
◻
Qualitative or Quantitative Differences?
🞑
◻
Continuous or Discontinuous?
🞑
◻
Do children think differently than adults or just have less
knowledge?
Is change gradual or marked by distinct stages?
Nature or Nurture?
🞑
Is development innate or affected by experience?
5
Learning Objectives: The Lifespan
Perspective
Explain the lifespan perspective and its assumptions
about development
◻ Differentiate periods of human development
◻ Explain the issues underlying lifespan development
◻ Identify the historical and contemporary theories
impacting lifespan development
◻
6
The Lifespan Perspective (Baltes,
1987)
◻
Development is lifelong
🞑
◻
Development is multidirectional
🞑
◻
No one age period is more important than another
Includes both gains and losses
Development is multidimensional
Physical – Body growth, immune function, motor skills
🞑 Cognitive – Attention, memory, language, intelligence
🞑 Psychosocial – Self-perception, relationships
🞑
7
The Lifespan Perspective (Baltes,
1987) (continued)
◻
Development is multidisciplinary
🞑
◻
Development is characterized by plasticity
🞑
◻
Involves fields such as biology, sociology, and medicine
Plasticity – Many of our characteristics are malleable and
can be changed
Development is multicontextual
🞑
Affected by circumstances such as time and socioeconomic
status
8
Contexts of Development (Baltes,
1987)
◻
Normative Age-graded Influences
🞑
◻
Changes experienced by people in a certain age group
(e.g., learning to talk, puberty, retirement)
Normative History-Graded Influences
Changes experienced by people alive at a certain time
(e.g., war, epidemics, economic recession)
🞑 Cohort - A group of people born at roughly the same
period in a particular society
🞑
◻
Non-Normative Life Influences
🞑
Individual experiences (e.g., illness, winning the lottery)
9
Table 1.1
Which Generation (Cohort) Are You?
Generation
Born between …
Silent Generation
1928 and 1945
Baby Boomers
1946 and 1964
Generation X
1965 and 1980
Millennials
1980 and later
Socioeconomic Status
10
Identifier based on shared levels of education, income,
and occupation
◻ People of similar SES are often similar in other ways
(e.g., parenting styles, where they live, stressors)
◻ Higher SES associated with more control and less stress
◻ Lower SES associated with poorer health and lower life
expectancy due to poor diet, dangerous jobs, lack of
medical care, etc.
◻
Culture
11
◻
Totality of shared language, knowledge, material
objects, and behavior
Ideas about right and wrong
🞑 Social interaction behaviors
🞑 Food, music, and activity preferences
🞑 Beliefs about achievement and success
🞑
Culture is learned from the people around us
◻ Helps members function in their society
◻
Culture (continued)
12
◻
Ethnocentrism – Belief that one’s own culture is
superior to other cultures
Lifespan vs. Life Expectancy
13
◻
Lifespan (Longevity)
The length of time a species can exist under the most
optimal conditions
🞑 Species-specific
🞑
◻
Life Expectancy
Predicted number of years a person born in a particular
time period can reasonably expect to live
🞑 Affected by behavior, experiences, individual genetic
factors
🞑
Conceptions of Age
14
Chronological Age - The number of years since your birth
◻ Biological Age – How quickly your body is aging
◻ Psychological Age – Psychologically adaptive capacity
compared to others of our chronological age
◻ Social Age - Based on the social norms of our culture and
the expectations our culture has for people of our age
group
◻
Periods of Development
15
Prenatal – Conception to birth
◻ Infancy and Toddlerhood – Birth to 2 years of age
◻ Early Childhood – 2 to 6 years of age
◻ Middle Childhood – 6 years of age to puberty
◻ Adolescence – From onset of puberty to age 18
◻ Emerging Adulthood – 18 to 25 years of age
◻ Early Adulthood – 25 to 40 or 45 years of age
◻ Middle Adulthood – 40-45 to 60-65 years of age
◻ Late Adulthood – Age 65 and older
◻
16
Table 1.2
Age Periods of Development
Age Period
Prenatal
Infancy and Toddlerhood
Early Childhood
Middle and Late Childhood
Adolescence
Emerging Adulthood
Early Adulthood
Middle Adulthood
Late Adulthood
Description
Starts at conception, continues through implantation in
the uterine wall by the embryo, and ends at birth.
Starts at birth and continues to two years of age
Starts at two years of age until six years of age
Starts at six years of age and continues until the
onset of puberty
Starts at the onset of puberty until 18
Starts at 18 until 25
Starts at 25 until 40-45
Starts at 40-45 until 60-65
Starts at 65 onward
17
Issues in Development: Nature and
Nurture
◻
Question about causes of development – Why are we
the way we are?
Nature Perspective - Heredity plays the most important
role in causing a trait/behavior
🞑 Nurture Perspective – The environment is most significant
in shaping the way we are
🞑
◻
Many things are caused by interaction of nature and
nurture
18
Issues in Development: Continuity vs.
Discontinuity
Question about the course of development – Gradual
process or abrupt change?
◻ Continuous
◻
🞑
◻
Development is a slow and gradual process
Discontinuous
Developmental change often occurs in distinct stages
🞑 Stages are qualitatively different from each other
🞑 Stages occur in a set, universal sequence
🞑
Figure 1.6
Continuous and Discontinuous Development
19
◻
The tree represents continuous development, while the
ladybug represents discontinuous/stage development
20
Issues in Development: Active vs.
Passive
How much of a role do we play in our development?
◻ Active – We construct our experiences
◻ Passive – We are affected by the environment or our
genes with little control
◻
21
Issues in Development: Stability vs.
Change
How much do we change as we develop?
◻ In what ways do we change?
◻ Stability Perspective – We change very little from
childhood to adulthood
◻ Change Perspective – Initial tendencies modified by
experiences
◻
Historical Theory of Development
22
◻
Freud’s Psychosexual Theory
Must learn to transform biological instincts into socially
acceptable behaviors
🞑 Early experiences important
🞑
23
Contemporary Theories of
Development
◻
Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory
Each period of life has a unique challenge (psychosocial
crisis) that must be managed
🞑 Resolution of early crises may affect later crises
🞑
◻
Learning Theory (Behaviorism)
Psychology should focus on observable behavior
🞑 Environment is important for affecting development
🞑
24
Table 1.3
Erikson’s Psychosocial Stages
Age range
Birth to 12 to 18
months
18 months to 3 years
3 to 6 years
6 to 12 years
12 to 18 years
19 to 40 years
40 to 65 years
65 to death
Psychosocial crisis
Trust versus Mistrust
Autonomy versus
shame/doubt
Initiative versus Guilt
Positive resolution of crisis
The child develops a feeling of trust in his or her caregivers.
The child learns what he or she can and cannot control and
develops a sense of free will.
The child learns to become independent by exploring,
manipulating, and taking action.
Industry versus inferiority The child learns to do things well or correctly according to
standards set by others, particularly in school.
Identity versus role
The adolescent develops a well-defined and positive sense
confusion
of self in relationship to others.
Intimacy versus isolation The person develops the ability to give and receive love and
to make long-term commitments.
Generativity versus
The person develops an interest in guiding the development
stagnation
of the next generation, often by becoming a parent.
Ego integrity versus
The person develops acceptance of his or her life as it was
despair
lived.
25
Contemporary Theories of
Development (continued)
◻
Social Learning Theory
🞑
We learn through observation and imitation (Bobo doll
video)
26
Contemporary Theories of
Development (continued)
◻
Piaget’s Cognitive Theory
Children of different ages interpret the world differently
🞑 Changes caused by maturation, not training
🞑
◻
Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory
Culture and social interaction influence cognitive
development
🞑 Can increase performance with proper guidance
🞑
Table 1.4
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
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Stage
Sensorimotor
Preoperational
Concrete
operational
Formal
operational
Approximate age range Characteristics
Birth to about 2 years
The child experiences the world through
the fundamental senses of seeing,
hearing, touching, and tasting.
2 to 7 years
Children acquire the ability to internally
represent the world through language
and mental imagery. They also start to
see the world from other people’s
perspectives.
7 to 11 years
Children become able to think logically.
They can increasingly perform
operations on objects that are real.
11 years to adulthood
Adolescents can think systematically, can
reason about abstract concepts, and can
understand ethics and scientific
reasoning.
Stage attainments
Object permanence
Theory of mind; rapid
increase in language
ability
Conservation
Abstract logic
28
Contemporary Theories of
Development (continued)
◻
Information Processing Theory
Cognitive development is continuous
🞑 We’re born with the ability to notice stimuli, store, and
retrieve information
🞑 Brain maturation and experiences develop our information
processing system
🞑
Learning Objectives: Research Methods
29
Define the scientific method
◻ Compare research methods noting the advantages and
disadvantages of each.
◻ Explain research involving time spans
◻ Explain ways to conduct ethical research
◻
Research Methods: Terms
30
Scientific Method - The assumptions, rules, and
procedures scientists use to conduct research
◻ Research Design – The specific way a researcher
collects, analyzes, and interprets data
◻
Descriptive research describes what is occurring at a
particular point in time
🞑 Correlational research examines relationships among
variables
🞑 Experimental research involves manipulating variables to
see their effects
🞑
Types of Descriptive Research
31
Case Study – Describe experience of individual or small
group
◻ Naturalistic Observation – Observe and record behavior
in everyday settings
◻ Laboratory Observation – Observe behavior in a setting
created by the researcher
◻
32
Types of Descriptive Research
(continued)
◻
Survey – Verbal or written questionnaire
Sample – Group who participates in the study
🞑 Population – Larger group the sample is based on
🞑 A representative sample includes the same percentages of
genders, age groups, ethnic groups, and socio-economic
groups as the larger population
🞑 Social desirability – Participants might lie to make
themselves look good
🞑
33
Types of Descriptive Research
(continued)
Interview – Direct questioning by
researcher
◻ Psychophysiological Assessment –
Biological measures (e.g., heart rate,
hormone levels, brain activity)
◻ Secondary/Content Analysis – Examine
information already collected (e.g., media,
existing data sets)
◻
Correlational Research
34
Assesses relationship between two or more variables
◻ Does not show causation
◻
🞑
May not know direction of relationship
■ TV violence causes aggression? Or aggressive kids watch more
violent TV?
🞑
Third variable may produce relationship
■ Parenting style may affect both aggression and TV viewing
Correlational Research (continued)
35
◻
Pearson correlation coefficient – Most common
statistical measure
Ranges from -1 to 1
🞑 Strength indicated by distance from 0
🞑
■ Closer to 0 = Weaker
■ Farther from 0 = Stronger
🞑
Direction indicated by valence
■ Positive = Both variables change in same direction
■ Negative = Variables change in opposite directions
Figure 1.14
Examples of Scatter Plots
36
Figure 1.15
Illustration of Third Variable Influence
37
Experimental Method
38
Studies cause-and-effect relationships
◻ Tests Hypotheses – Specific statements about the
relationships between variables
◻
Variable - Something that changes in value
🞑 Independent Variable
🞑
■ Causal variable
■ Manipulated/controlled by researcher
🞑
Dependent Variable
■ Measured (outcome) variable
■ Believed to be affected by IV
Experimental Method (continued)
39
◻
Participants randomly assigned to groups
🞑
Each group receives different level of IV
■ Experimental group receives treatment
■ Control group doesn’t
🞑
Compare each group on outcome (DV)
■ Different outcomes caused by differences in IV
◻
Control for extraneous variables
🞑
Variables that could affect results but aren’t part of
experiment
Table 1.5
Characteristics of the Three Research Designs
40
Research design
Descriptive
Goal
Advantages
To create a snapshot of the Provides a relatively
current state of affairs
complete picture of what is
occurring at a given time.
Allows the development of
questions for further study.
Correlational
To assess the relationships
between and among two
or more variables
Experimental
Allows testing of expected
relationships between and
among variables and the
making of predictions. Can
assess these relationships in
everyday life events.
To assess the causal impact Allows drawing of
of one or more
conclusions about the
experimental manipulations causal relationships among
on a dependent variable
variables.
Source: Stangor, C. (2011). Research methods for the behavioral sciences (4th ed.). Mountain View, CA: Cengage.
Disadvantages
Does not assess
relationships among
variables. May be
unethical if participants do
not know they are being
observed.
Cannot be used to draw
inferences about the causal
relationships between and
among the variables.
Cannot experimentally
manipulate many important
variables. May be
expensive and time
consuming.
Developmental Research
41
◻
Cross-Sectional Research
Compare different groups that vary
in age
🞑 Cohort Effect – Age differences
caused by being born in a certain
time period
🞑
■ Differences in attitudes,
experiences, education
Developmental Research (continued)
42
◻
Longitudinal Research
Study one group repeatedly over time
🞑 Attrition – People stop participating
🞑 Practice Effect – Performance improves with practice
🞑
Developmental Research (continued)
43
◻
Sequential Research
🞑
Study multiple age groups over time
Table 1.6
Time Span Research Designs Advantages and Disadvantages
44
Ethics in Research
45
Prevent harm to participants
◻ Informed Consent
◻
Participants must understand what they’ll be asked to do
and why
🞑 Some deception may be allowed
🞑 Children ineligible to give informed consent
🞑
Ethics in Research (continued)
46
Confidentiality
◻ Deception - Participants are not fully informed about the
nature of the research project before participating in it
◻ Debriefing - Explain the purposes and procedures of the
research and remove any harmful aftereffects
◻
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