A | B |
Baby's tendency, when touched on th cheek to open the mouth and search for the nipple | rooting reflex |
Person's characteristic emotional excitability | temperament |
Adapting current schemas to incorporate new information | accommodation |
All mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, and remembering | cognition |
Emotional tie with another person shown by seeking closeness to the caregiver and showing distress on separation | attachment |
Optimal period shortly after birth when an organism's exposure to certain experiences produces proper development | critical period |
Biological growth processes that enable orderly changes in behavior | maturation |
Concepts or mental frameworks that organize and interpret information | schemas |
In Piaget's theory, the inability of the preoperational child to take another person's point of view or to understand that symbols can represent other objects | egocentrism |
In Piaget's theory, the stage (from about 2 to 6 or 7 years of age) during which a child learns to use language but cannot yet think logically | preoperational stage |
In piaget's theory, the stage (from birth to about 2 years of age) during which infants learn about the world through their sensory impressions and motor activities | sensorimotor stage |
In Piaget's theory, the stage of cognitive development (from about 6 or 7 to 11 years of age) during which children gain the mental skills that let them think logically about concrete events. | concrete operational stage |
In Piaget's theory, the stage of cognitive development (beginning about age 12) during which people begin to think logically about abstract concepts and form strategies about things they may not have experienced | formal operational stage |
Interpreting new experiences in terms of existing schemas | assimilation |
Physical and cognitive abnormalities that appear in children whose mothers consumed large amounts of alcohol while pregnant. | fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) |
Pioneer in the study of developmental psychology who introduced a stagea theory of cognitive development that led to a better understanding of children's thought processes | Jean Piaget |
Researcher who focused on critical attachment periods in baby birds, a concept he called imprinting | Konrad Lorenz |
Style of parenting marked by making demands on the child, being responsive, setting and enforcing rules, and discussing the reasons behind the rules | Authoritarian parenting |
Style of parenting marked by making demands on the child, being responsive, setting and enforcing rules, and discussing the reasons behind the rules | Authoritative parenting |
Style of parenting marked by submitting to children's desires, making few demands, and using little punishment | Permissive parenting |
Substances that cross the placental barrier and prevent the fetus from developing normally. | Teratogens |
Awareness that things continue to exist even when you cannot see them or hear them | object permanence |
Biochemical units of heredity. | Genes |
Developing human organism from about 2 weeks after fertilization through the end of the 8th week | embryo |
Fear of strangers that infants commonly display, beginning by 8 months of age | stranger anxiety |
Developing human organism from about 9 weeks after conception to birth. | fetus |
Fertilized egg | zygote |
Principle (which Piaget believed to be a part of concrete operational reasoning) that properties such as mass, volume, and number remain the same despite changes in the forms of objects | conservation |
Process by which certain animals form attachments during a critical period early in life. | imprinting |