Human Development

Description

Questions based on Human Development notes
Nicole Wells8309
Quiz by Nicole Wells8309, updated more than 1 year ago
Nicole Wells8309
Created by Nicole Wells8309 over 8 years ago
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
What is developmental Psychology concerned with?
Answer
  • a)Changes in psychological functioning.
  • b) Physical changes.
  • c) Both A and B
  • d) Neither

Question 2

Question
Development is unpredictable changes in behaviour associated with age.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 3

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The adolescence stage of Life Span development is:
Answer
  • 6-15 years
  • 11-20 years
  • 11-16 years
  • 13-19 years

Question 4

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Stages in life are all considered to be abrupt changes, called discontinuity.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 5

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To say that changes are developed by nature means that:
Answer
  • the changes are controlled by biological factors
  • development is molded by our experiences, especially our psychological environment
  • We are passively going through life, and are not drastically affected by what goes on around us.

Question 6

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The Critical Period in development is a biologically determined period in the life of animals during which certain forms of learning can take place most easily.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 7

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The sensitive period is the least optimal for learning because children have trouble dealing with their feelings and are easily confused.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 8

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Dani's Story was used as an example in class. She..
Answer
  • Was a young, exceptionally smart girl who troubled psychologists regarding development because she was years ahead of her classmates.
  • Was a young girl who was isolated from social interaction, fed little, and behaved like a 6 month old at the age of 6.
  • is a girl who is part of a longitudinal study about development since the age of 6 months
  • is a girl raised by two deaf parents who has learned to speak solely from school.

Question 9

Question
Normative investigations
Answer
  • Describe characteristics of a specific age or developmental stage
  • need support and catergorization
  • ex. First word- 1-3 years
  • Are based off of average, norms
  • ex. Sexual experimentation- 12-14 years

Question 10

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Cross-sectional design is a way to study development that involves the study pf different groups of participants based on chronological ages observed at the same time.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 11

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Longitudinal design is:
Answer
  • repeated observation of testing the same people over time
  • Testing different people of different ages
  • Keeping someone in a room for a long duration to see how they are affected

Question 12

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The advantages of a longitudinal design include:
Answer
  • Able to study longer term individual differences
  • Ages related changes cannot be confused with variations in different societal circumstances
  • More groups can be studied
  • Inexpensive compared to cross-sectional design

Question 13

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Those who assess development can include:
Answer
  • Physicians
  • Nurses
  • Day care workers
  • therapists
  • teachers
  • psychologists
  • the child's parents
  • other parents
  • baby books
  • google

Question 14

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Cognitive development is the study of the processes and products of the mind as they emerge and change over time.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 15

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John Locke (empiricism) believed...
Answer
  • infants are born with a tabula rasa, and experience shapes development, meaning we are a reflection of our external environment.
  • infants are born with an innate sense of right and wrong
  • infants inherit both the good and bad qualities as soon as they are born

Question 16

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Jean-Jacques Rousseau believed that infants enter the world with learned knowledge through evolutionary history which shapes development.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 17

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Jean [blank_start]Piaget[blank_end] believed that representations of [blank_start]reality[blank_end] change at different stages- needed for adaptation. He wasn't interested in the amount of knowledge. Mental structures that enable individuals to interpret the world are called [blank_start]schemes[blank_end]. [blank_start]Assimilation[blank_end] is the idea that we modify new environmental information to [blank_start]fit[blank_end] into what is already known, where [blank_start]accommodation[blank_end] is the restructuring or modifying of a child's [blank_start]existing[blank_end] schemes so that new information is [blank_start]accounted[blank_end] for.
Answer
  • Piaget
  • reality
  • schemes
  • Assimilation
  • fit
  • accommodation
  • existing
  • accounted

Question 18

Question
Examples of assimilation:
Answer
  • red ball- bounce, red apple- red but doesn't bounce, pumpkin- not red, doesn't bounce
  • Puppy has 4 legs and fur. This animal meow's therefore not a puppy.

Question 19

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A child realizing that the bacon they are eating is actually a pig is an example of Piaget's theory of assimilation.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 20

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The concrete operations stage is:
Answer
  • Ages 0-2: senses and motion without use of symbols, object permanence and mobility allowing for knowledge acquisition.
  • Ages 2-7: use of symbols, language matures, memory develops, imagination- most learning. Egocentrism, centration
  • Ages 7-11: Physical properties of objects don't change even though appearance might (reversibility). Logical systematic manipulation of symbols to create objects ex. 1+1=2, 2-1=1
  • 11-adult: abstract and hypothetical thinking, alternatives, logic, return to egocentric thinking.

Question 21

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Egocentrism is/relates to:
Answer
  • the inability to take other's perspectives
  • believing that you are always wrong
  • knowing the world revolves around you
  • putting aside one's own ego in order to cater to others

Question 22

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Centration is the tendency for attention to not focus on any part of an object, sometimes ignoring it altogether.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 23

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Renee [blank_start]Baillargeon[blank_end] had a contemporary cognitive view about [blank_start]infrant cognition.[blank_end] He demonstrated that some aspects of Piaget's stages don't occur in order. This is called [blank_start]violation[blank_end] of expectation experiments, given the example of rudimentary object permanence actually occurred at a [blank_start]younger[blank_end] age, being 4-5 months.
Answer
  • Baillargeon
  • infant cognition.
  • violation
  • younger

Question 24

Question
Theory of Mind...
Answer
  • is the idea that we start to see the perspective of others through our own eyes
  • is the framework for initial understanding called foundational theories (accumulation of experiences)
  • includes the False belief Task
  • None of the above

Question 25

Question
Lev Vygotsky (Internalization)- the process of absorbing [blank_start]knowledge[blank_end] from the social and cultural context that has a [blank_start]major[blank_end] impact on how cognition unfolds over time. The zone of [blank_start]Proximal development[blank_end] is the difference between what a learner can do without [blank_start]help[blank_end] and what he or she can do with [blank_start]help[blank_end].
Answer
  • knowledge
  • major
  • Proximal development
  • help
  • help

Question 26

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Fluid intelligence shows a greater increase with age.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 27

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Social development is how an individual's social interactions and expectations remain the same over time.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 28

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Erikson's psychosocial stages represent
Answer
  • 8 conflicts or crises that every individual must face through the life span
  • the stages of development
  • the stages of psychological development
  • how people interact with each other based on their chronological age

Question 29

Question
Erikson's psychosocial stages are: 0-1 1/2 [blank_start]Trust[blank_end] vs. [blank_start]Mistrust[blank_end] 1 1/2 - 3 [blank_start]Autonomy[blank_end] vs. [blank_start]self-doubt[blank_end] 3-6 [blank_start]Initiative[blank_end] vs. [blank_start]Guilt[blank_end] 6-puberty [blank_start]Competence[blank_end] vs. [blank_start]Inferiority[blank_end] Adolescent- [blank_start]Identity[blank_end] vs. [blank_start]Confusion[blank_end] Early adult- [blank_start]Intimacy[blank_end] vs. [blank_start]isolation[blank_end] Middle adult- [blank_start]generativity[blank_end] vs. [blank_start]stagnation[blank_end] Later adult- [blank_start]Ego integrity[blank_end] vs. [blank_start]despair[blank_end]
Answer
  • Trust
  • Mistrust
  • Autonomy
  • self-doubt
  • Initiative
  • Guilt
  • Competence
  • Inferiority
  • Identity
  • Confusion
  • Intimacy
  • isolation
  • generativity
  • stagnation
  • Ego integrity
  • despair

Question 30

Question
At 18 months, a child develops
Answer
  • a variety of basic emotions
  • Envy, embarrassment, empathy emerge
  • learn rules and performance standards
  • display guilt

Question 31

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Socialization is a lifelong process through which an individual's behaviour patterns, values, standards, skills, attitudes, and motives are shaped to conform those regarded as desirable in a particular society.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 32

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What is temperament?
Answer
  • Biological levels of emotional and behavioural response to the environment
  • the amount of anger or temper one possesses
  • one's personality
  • none of the above

Question 33

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[blank_start]Attachment[blank_end] is intense social-emotional relationship with mother, father, or regular caregiver. Some species experience [blank_start]imprinting[blank_end] of the first moving object they see (Konrad Lorenz). John Bowlby says that humans are biologically predisposed to form attachments. He agreed with Maslow. He says attachment forms lifelong schema for relationships called [blank_start]internal working model[blank_end]. In class we watched a video portraying this, demonstrating Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation Test. The three main types of attachment style are secure, insecure-avoidant, and [blank_start]insecure-ambivalent/resistant[blank_end].This can be highly predictive of [blank_start]child's[blank_end] later behaviour and interactions with others.
Answer
  • Attachment
  • Detachment
  • Love
  • Clingyness
  • imprinting
  • hatred
  • lust
  • the emotions
  • internal working model
  • external working model
  • the force theory
  • socialization
  • insecure-ambivalent/resistant
  • pseu-secure
  • minor resistant
  • child's
  • yo momma's

Question 34

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Parenting styles are based off of demandingness and their ability to keep a child inline.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 35

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If a parent is INDULGENT, their parenting style is:
Answer
  • Underdemanding, low in control attempts and accepting, responsive, and child-centred.
  • Underdemanding, low in control attempts and rejecting, unresponsive, parent-centred.
  • Demanding, controlling and accepting, responsive, and child-centred.
  • Demanding, controlling and rejecting, unresponsive, parent-centred.

Question 36

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Freud's Cupboard Theory is that bonding has many purposes, including feeding, loving, learning and safety.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 37

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There have been several monkey studies. Harry Harlow and Stephen Suomi both did these experiments. They found that:
Answer
  • The monkey's were more attached to the robot monkey feeding them.
  • The monkey's were equally attached to the feeding robot and the soft robot monkey.
  • The monkey's weremore attached to the soft robot monkey.

Question 38

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Adolescent ego-centrism is the quality of thinking that leads some adolescents to believe that they are the focus of attention in social situations, to believe that their problems are unique to be unusually hypocritical, and to be "pseudostupid".
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 39

Question
The main aspects of social development for adults are:
Answer
  • Intimacy- capacity to make full commitment to another, well-being, selective social interaction theory
  • Generativity- commitment beyond oneself to family, work, society, or future generations.
  • Self-sufficient- having ones own house/apartment, income, social life

Question 40

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In regards to adulthood, personality is fairly stable over time, and changes are predictable.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 41

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According to Kubler-Ross there are five stages of death and dying
Answer
  • Denial
  • Anger
  • Bargaining
  • Depression
  • Acceptance

Question 42

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Morality is a system of beliefs, values, and underlying judgements about the rightness or wrongness of human acts
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 43

Question
Lawrence [blank_start]Kohlberg[blank_end] and the theory of moral [blank_start]development[blank_end]- studied moral reasoning in [blank_start]seven[blank_end] stages. This was shaped by [blank_start]Piaget[blank_end], changing importance of consequences of [blank_start]acts[blank_end] and [blank_start]intentions[blank_end]. Moral [blank_start]dilemmas[blank_end] used to evaluate reasons for moral [blank_start]decisions[blank_end]. Children do not see morality as adults do- they are more interested in what others think.
Answer
  • development
  • seven
  • Piaget
  • Kohlberg
  • acts
  • intentions
  • dilemmas
  • decisions

Question 44

Question
Kohlberg's model states that:
Answer
  • An individual can be at only one stage at a given time
  • Everyone goes through the stages in a fixed order
  • Each stage is more comprehensive and complex than the preceding
  • the same stages occur in every culture
  • All of the above

Question 45

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Carol Gilligan believed that both males and females based their morality on caring for others and maintaining harmony in social relations
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 46

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There is less activity in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) when someone is lying.
Answer
  • True
  • False
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