| A | B |
| accomadation | new schemes created and old ones are adjusted |
| assimilation | external world is interpreted in terms of current schemes |
| attachment | the strong affection tie humans feel toward care givers |
| hierarchival classification | organization of abjectsk into subclasses and subclasses |
| centration | the focus on one aspect of a situation |
| animistic thinking | belief that inanimate objects have lifelike qualities |
| egocentrism | failure to distinguish the symbolic viewpoints of others |
| dual representaism | viewing a symbolic object as both an object and a symbol |
| goodness-of-fit | explain s how temperament and enviroment can produce favorable outcomes |
| sociodramatic play | make-believe play |
| operations | mental representations of actions that obey logical rules |
| self-concept | the set of attributes, abilities attitudes and values that an individual believes defines themselves |
| relational aggressions | damage' perrs relationships |
| gender identy | image of oneself as relativey masculine or feminine |
| habituation | gradual reduction in the strenth of a response due to repetive stimulation |
| recasts | adult responses that restrucre children's incorrect speech |
| teratogen | ant enviromental agent that causes damage during pre-natal period |
| overt agression | a form of hostile agression that harms others through physical injury |
| defereed imatation | athe ability to remember and copy the behavior of models who are not present |
| episodic memory | memory for everyday expierences |