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PSY2001 Developmental Psychology - Full Notes

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The full notes for Dr Price's developmental psychology course. This was done in 2021. Covers the following topics: An introduction to developmental psychology Face perception Object concept and mental representations Piagetian development Language development Number concept Cognitive devel...

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  • December 18, 2022
  • 71
  • 2021/2022
  • Class notes
  • Dr bess price
  • All classes
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PSY2001 – Developmental Psychology
Lesson 1 – Introduction.
 Approach to PSY2001
o Focus on early development - key cog, emotional and social change
o Each lecture targets a key areas of developmental research
 In depth discussion of research in those areas
 Focus on synthesis of research approaches and key findings
 Developmental psychology - study of physical, cog, social, emotional and behv changes
throughout lifespan. As most dramatic changes early in life, thus we focus on infancy and
childhood
 Aims of developmental - describe, explain and optimize human development e.g. reading for
young children
 Key questions
o Continuity v Discontinuity
 Is maturation continuous?
 Discrete age-specific periods or stages (Freud) ?
 How can study design affect our perception of development?
 Different age groups
 Time frame of study
o Stability v Change
 Concerns traits
 Importance of early experiences?
 Institutionalization and Romanian Orphan studies (Rutter et al, 1998) - higher
the age, less likely to be able to adapt and become de-institutionalized. Most
effective younger than 6 months
o Nature v Nurture
 Biological: genetic inheritance
 E.g. Gesell
 Environmental: experiences (parenting, education, culture)
 Think of Watson's claims to be able to shape anyone
 How do we measure these influences
 Genotype-environment interaction and epigenetic studies (Waddington's
Epigenetic Landscape)
 Remember to re-read PSY1003 and PSY1002 for more info on these. PSY1006 on
instinct, learning, maturation and motivation also important
 Baltes' Model of Development
o 3 types of influences on development
o Normative age-graded influences (e.g. puberty/starting school)
o Normative history-graded influences (e.g. WWII, natural disaster, COVID-19)
o Non-normative life events (e.g. death of parent/serious injury)
o Less restrictive way of looking at development

, o




 Bronfenbrenner's Ecological Model of Human Development
o Focus on development in context of ecology




o Microsystem - individual experiences
o Mesosystem - links in settings in which the individual participates
o Ecosystem - settings that the individual does not participate in directly, but still effects the
individual
o Macrosystem - general ideology and organization of social institutions and cultures
o Idea that the higher circles can affect lesser circles
 Factors in research
o Age
o Cohort
o Time of testing
 Research designs
o Note on observational studies
 Were in favor between 1920-30 (Piagetian development) but dropped out of
fashion during the behaviorist movement
 Came back with a vengeance in the 50s and 60s with Ainsworth's Strange
Situation
o Cross-sectional studies
 Different ppts, different ages, same time

,  Cost effective
 Quick
 Most often used
 Confounds
 Might miss certain changes
 Doesn’t factor in non-normative life events
 Cohort effects
 Individual differences
 Does not go into casual processes involved
o Longitudinal studies
 Same ppts, different ages, different times
 Time-consuming
 High attrition rate
 Original research question may not be viable as study completes
o Cohort studies
 Different ppts, same ages, different historical time
 Time consuming
 Danger of research question becoming obsolete
 High attrition rate
o Cohort-sequential studies
 Different and same participants, different and same ages, different and
same historical time
 High attrition rate
 Time consuming
 Question may become obsolete
o




o Focus on cross sectional and longitudinal studies
o Twin studies
 MZ twins (100%)
 DZ twins (50%)
 Confounding effect of environment
 Also the tendency to treat MZ twins more alike than DZ twins
o Adoption studies
 Rearing environment from adoptive parents

,  Genetic inheritance from biological parents
 Whom do they resemble most
 Self-selecting sample
 Issue of differing ages of adoption confounding studies
 Cross-fostering experiments - people adopt children close to them in
background
 Other influences/ways of studying development
o Evolutionary psychology
 Does human ancestry tell us about ourselves now?
 E.g. spatial mapping being used for hunting and tracking animals
 E.g. remembering locations for finding and gathering food
 Evolutionary developmental psychology looks at differences, e.g differences
between genders
 Criticisms outlined by Koffman et al (2011) study of Karbi and Khasi tribes
(Karbi patriarchal and had better spatial mapping, but Khasi matriarchal had
no major gender differences) + neurosexism and binary view (Eliot et al,
2021)
o Culture
 How can culture affect development
 How does culture influence developmental studies?
 Issue of WEIRD science
 Issue of western centric study
 Also temporal cultural issues
o Comparative psychology - comparisons to other species. More about this in later
lectures
o Non-lab experimental methods
 Degree of control
 Ecological studies - seeing individuals in their natural environment
 Less controlled methods like ecological studies or interviews are
used often when there is little systematic data on the subject.
 Observations can also be non-experimental, such as Dunn and
Kendrick's (1982) study on sibling relationships.
 Correlational analyses is often used for these observations, which
are put into a matrix.
 Of course, correlational analyses come with their own issues, which
can be reduced using regression analysis or cross lagged correlations
(measurements at two or more time points in longitudinal study)
 Quasi experiments - weakest form of experiment, where the IV is changed
naturally
 Example: Himmelweit, Oppenheim and Vince (1958) before and
after study of children's behaviour after TV transmitter introduced in
Norwich.
 Issue is lack of control harms hypothetico-deductive approach
 Data recording
o Observational methods
 Behavioural categories
 Time sampling
 Either non participant observation, or ethnographic study
o Interviews or questionnaires
o Focus groups
o Tests and psychometrics

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