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Development, learning and behavior (201700107)
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Woordenlijst DLB
Development, learning and behavior
Hoofdstuk 1
Meta-analysis: A method for combining the results from independent studies to
reach conclusions based on all of them.
Amygdala: An area of the brain that is involved in emotional reactions
Nature: Our biological endowment; the genes we receive from our parents
Nurture: the environments, both physical and social, that influence our
development
Genome: each person’s complete set of hereditary information
Epigenetics: the study of stable changes in gene expression that are mediated
by the environment.
Methylation: A biochemical process that influences behavior by suppressing
gene activity and expression
Continuous development: the idea that changes with age occur gradually, in
small increments, like that of a pine three growing taller and taller.
Discontinuous development: the idea that changes with age include
occasional large shifts, like the transition from caterpillar to cocoon to butterfly.
Stage theories: approaches proposing that development involves a series of
large, discontinuous, age related phases.
Cognitive development: The development of thinking and reasoning
Neurotransmitters: chemicals involved in communication among brain cells
Sociocultural context: The physical, social, cultural, economic, and historical
circumstances that make up any child’s environment.
Socioeconomic status (SES): a measure of social class based on income and
education
Cumulative risk: The accumulation of disadvantages over years of development
Scientific method: an approach to testing beliefs that involves choosing a
question, formulating a hypothesis, testing the hypothesis, and drawing a
conclusion.
Hypotheses: testable predictions of the presence or absense of phenomena or
relations
Reliability: the degree to which independent measurements of a given behavior
are consistent
Interrater reliability: the amount of agreement in the observations of different
raters who witness the same behavior
Test-retest reliability: the degree of similarity of a participant’s performance
on two or more occasions
Validity: the degree to which a test measures what it is intended to measure
Internal validity: the degree to which effects observed within experiments can
be attibuted to the factor that the researcher is testing
External validity: the degree to which results can be generalized beyond the
particulars of the research.
Structured interview: a research procedure in which all participants are asked
to answer the same questions
Questionnaire: a method, similar to the structured interview, that allows
researchers to gather information from a large number of participants
simultaneously by presenting them with a uniform set of questions
Clinical interview: a procedure in which questions are adjusted in accord with
the answers the interviewee provides
, Naturalistic observation: examination of ongoing behavior in an environment
not controlled by the researcher
Structured observation: a method that involves presenting an identical
situation to each participant and recording the participant’s behavior
Variables: attributes that vary across individuals and situations, such as age,
seks and popularity
Correlational designs: studies intended to indicate how two variables are
related to each other
Correlation: the association between two variables
Direction-of-causation problem: the concept that a correlation between two
variables does not indicate which, if either, variable is the cause of the other.
Third-variable problem: the concept that a correlation between two variables
may stem for both being influenced by some third variable
Experimental designs: a group of approaches that allow inferences about
causes and effects to be drawn
Random assignment: a procedure in which each participant had an equal
chance of being assigned to each group within an experiment
Experimental control: the ability of researches to determine the specific
experiments of participants during the course of an experiment.
Experimental group: The group of participants in an experimental design who
are presented the experience of interest
Control group: the group of participants in an experimental design who are not
presented the experience of interest but in other ways are treated similarly
Independent variable: the experience that participants in the experimental
group receive and that those in the control group do not receive.
Dependent variable: a behavior that is measured to determine whether it is
affected by exposure to the independent variable
Cross-sectional design: a research method in which participants of different
ages are compared on a given behavior or characteristic over a short period
Longitudinal design: a method of study in which the same participants are
studied twice of more over a substantial length of time
Microgenetic design: a method of study in which the same participants are
studied repeatedly over a short period.
Counting-on strategy: counting up from the larger addend the number of
times indicated by the smaller addend
Hoofdstuk 2
Epigenesis: the emergence of new structures and functions in the course of
development
Gametes (germ cells): reproductive cells -egg and sperm- that contain only
half of the genetic material of all the other cells in the body
Meiosis: cell division that produces gametes
Conception: the union of egg from the mother and a sperm from the father
Zygote: a fertilized egg cell
Embryo: the name given tot he developing organism from the 3td to the 8th
week of prenatal development
Fetus: the name given to the developing organism from the 9th week to birth
Mitosis: cell division that results in two identical daugther cells
Embryonic stem cells: embryonic cells, which can develop into any type of
body cell
Apoptosis: genetically programmed cell death
Identical twins: Twins that result from the splitting in half of the zygote,
resulting in each of the two resulting zygotes having exactly the same set of
genes
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