Deck 5: Infancy: Cognitive Development

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Question
Language development can be explained entirely as a result of imitation and shaping.
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Question
Learning theorists believe that language is acquired as a result of inborn or prewired factors.
Question
A 2007 study of children aged 8 to 16 months concluded that infants exposed to baby DVDs scored lower on language development than children with no screen time.
Question
Calling all four-legged animals doggies is an example of an overextension.
Question
The Bayley Scales may identify sensory or neurological problems.
Question
Imitation after a time delay occurs as early as 6 months of age.
Question
A primary circular reaction involves repeating a behaviour that affects the environment.
Question
Visual recognition memory during infancy is related to later IQ scores.
Question
"Motherese" has been shown to slow language development.
Question
According to Piaget's cognitive-developmental theory, the first stage of cognitive development is the formal operational stage.
Question
Babbling is the first communicative sound an infant makes.
Question
Research findings discussed in the text demonstrate that infants are unable to remember events that occurred to them from day to day.
Question
Skinner's perspective is that decreasing reinforcement leads to a faster growth in vocabulary.
Question
Infants are unable to imitate others' behaviours until 6 months of age.
Question
According to Piaget, during the fourth substage of sensory motor development, infants coordinate schemas to attain specific goals.
Question
Children only speak words and phrases they have heard before.
Question
Imitation is the basis for much of human learning.
Question
Children who are bilingual experience cognitive benefits including enhanced attention control.
Question
Piaget theorized that children follow an orderly sequence of stages through cognitive development.
Question
Learning theory explains language development primarily as a result of nature.
Question
Object permanence is recognition that an object exists when out of sight.
Question
Piaget hypothesized that cognitive processes develop in an orderly sequence of stages.
Question
Reading to a child can help foster his or her language development.
Question
The nativist view of language development holds that inborn factors cause children to attend to and acquire language in certain ways.
Question
Parents can influence babbling through simple acts of reinforcement such as smiling.
Question
There is no evidence of a sensitive period for language development.
Question
Selective reinforcement of children's pronunciation may lead to slower language development.
Question
By approximately 6 months of age, infants tend to look for objects that are dropped.
Question
Approximately 30% of Canadians report that they speak two languages at home.
Question
Newborns' ability to imitate others may have a survival function.
Question
The sensitive period for language development takes place between 18 and 24 months.
Question
The case study of Genie supports the idea that the tendency to acquire language is easily learned at any time in life.
Question
Language learning is most efficient during the sensitive period that lasts until puberty.
Question
According to the nativist perspective, children have an inborn tendency to language learning in the form of neurological "prewiring."
Question
Research on deferred imitation supports Piaget's view of cognitive development.
Question
Children who use language to label objects are said to have a referential style of language.
Question
Most children can use 500 words by 18 months of age.
Question
During the first year of life, infants' reflexes are stereotypical and inflexible.
Question
The situation with Genie, who was locked away for much of her first 13 years of life, supports the nurture view of language development.
Question
Children usually utter their first word at around 12 months of age.
Question
Cooing is the same thing as crying.
Question
Genie, the girl who was locked away for much of her first 13 years of life, was unable to learn language as well as those who had normal language development.
Question
Research on infant memory has shown that newborns adjust their rate of sucking to hear a recording of their mother reading a story she had read aloud during the last weeks of pregnancy,
Question
During the sensorimotor period, infants progress from responding to events with reflexes, or ready-made schemas, to goal-oriented behaviour.
Question
Tertiary circular reactions occur when infants engage in purposeful adaptations of established schemas to specific situations.
Question
While observing infants, you witness a tertiary circular reaction. What stage of cognitive development have you observed?

A) the sensorimotor stage
B) the preoperational stage
C) the concrete operational stage
D) the formal operational stage
Question
At what age do most infants begin cooing?

A) at birth
B) at age 1 week
C) at age 2 months
D) at age 4 months
Question
What conclusions have been reached about the benefits of infant learning DVDs such as Baby Einstein?

A) The older the child when first exposed to such videos, the more positive the impact.
B) Infants develop habituation to such videos and they quickly lose their effectiveness.
C) They have been demonstrated to increase intelligence scores in later life by at least 18 points.
D) They may actually inhibit verbal ability and bonding with caregivers.
Question
A child's Mean Length of Utterance (MLU) decreases as the child develops.
Question
Which of the following is an example of a specific nominal?

A) boy
B) fire truck
C) brown dog
D) Mr. Rogers
Question
Which vocalization is the first that resembles human speech?

A) crying
B) cooing
C) babbling
D) making no sound, which shows awareness that all is well
Question
Receptive language tends to outpace expressive language.
Question
As Michael plays in his crib, his parents overhear him making repetitive sounds such as "babababa" and "dadadada." What term describes this repeating of syllables?

A) cooing
B) echolalia
C) babbling
D) intonation
Question
What distinguishes primary circular reactions from secondary circular reactions?

A) They are the same; one engages in a more complex behaviour.
B) Primary reactions involve more important behaviours than secondary reactions.
C) Primary reactions involve only reflexes, whereas secondary reactions involve thoughts.
D) Primary reactions focus on the body, whereas secondary reactions focus on the environment.
Question
Janet tells her husband that their infant son, Josh, is exhibiting echolalia. What behaviour is she referring to?

A) Josh understands more words than he can say.
B) Josh is speaking words that he does not understand.
C) Josh is repeating syllables.
D) Josh is using his tongue's circular rotation to speak.
Question
Critics of Piaget's cognitive-developmental theory suggest that development tends to be more gradual and continuous than he suggested.
Question
When children accommodate, they create new schemas for the world.
Question
Memory improves dramatically between 1 and 2 months of age and then again by 36 months.
Question
Jenna can tell the difference between a toy she has seen before and a new toy. What term refers to this ability?

A) habituation
B) sensory memory
C) recognition memory
D) classical conditioning
Question
What is the most advanced substage in Piaget's sensorimotor period?

A) the primary circular reaction substage
B) the secondary circular reaction substage
C) the invention of new means through mental combinations substage
D) the coordination of secondary schemas substage
Question
Pamela is trying to place her rectangular block in the rectangular opening of her "know your shape" toy, but it is too wide to fit. She studies the block for some time and then grabs it, rotates it sideways, and the block successful falls in the opening. What substage of sensorimotor development was Pamela demonstrating?

A) the primary circular reaction substage
B) the secondary circular reactions substage
C) the coordination of secondary schemas substage
D) the invention of new means through mental combinations substage
Question
Theo is 10 months old. His parents overhear him talking to himself in his crib. His language resembles adult speech in sound, with words rising and falling. What term best describes Theo's vocalizations?

A) echolalia
B) intonation
C) turn-taking
D) vocabulary development
Question
Sarah knows that kittens are animals. Her mother tells her that puppies are also animals. Sarah then changes her schema of animals to include puppies. What is Sarah using when she changes her schema to incorporate this new information?

A) assimilation
B) reaction range
C) augmentation
D) accommodation
Question
A child learns to call a dog "bow-wow" and now calls all animals he sees "bow-wow." What is this child's behaviour an example of?

A) morpheme
B) overextension
C) egocentric speech
D) telegraphic speech
Question
What is the relationship between achievements on sensorimotor tests and other test achievements?

A) Achievements on sensorimotor tests are strongly related to subsequent IQ scores.
B) Achievements on sensorimotor tests are strongly related to childhood success in school.
C) Achievements on sensorimotor tests do not reliably predict later school performance.
D) Achievements on sensorimotor tests are strongly related to verbal and symbolic scores obtained in later childhood.
Question
What is the relationship between MLU and chronological age?

A) Chronological age and MLU are unrelated.
B) As chronological age increases, MLU tends to increase.
C) MLU tends to decrease initially because other developmental challenges also occur when chronological age increases.
D) Chronological age increases across time, whereas MLU remains the same across time.
Question
What is the definition of the referential language style?

A) using personal pronouns to refer to the self
B) using language to label objects in the environment
C) using language as a means for engaging in social interaction
D) using words that make no particular reference, but allow practice with the vocal cords
Question
What substage of sensorimotor development serves as a transition to the symbolic thought of the next stage?

A) the tertiary circular reaction substage
B) the secondary circular reaction substage
C) the coordination of secondary schemas substage
D) the invention of new means through mental combinations substage
Question
Jennifer is eager to know when her son will start babbling. What is her pediatrician most likely to tell her?

A) It occurs before cooing.
B) It occurs after the ability to use intonation.
C) It appears between 6 and 9 months of age.
D) It is strongly related to words the child is trying to say.
Question
Piaget closely observed the activities of children and noted that they tend to experiment with the environment. Because of this behaviour, what did Piaget consider children to be?

A) scientists
B) copiers
C) comedians
D) students
Question
What is the definition of a specific nominal?

A) a proper noun
B) a personal pronoun
C) a class of objects
D) a word longer than two syllables
Question
Jennifer is curious about her son's cries and coos. What is her pediatrician most likely to tell her?

A) They are based entirely on know-how.
B) They are innate, but modified by experience.
C) They are based entirely on genetic encoding.
D) They are accidental noises that are soon replaced by meaningful sounds.
Question
What is the definition of the mean length of utterance?

A) the average number of morphemes a child uses in a sentence
B) the total number of sounds a child makes when trying to express herself
C) the average number of letters in the child's usual utterances
D) the complex arrangement of single words used to express complex thoughts
Question
Lacey is 7 months old. She shakes a rattle so it will make a noise she likes. What is Lacey's action an example of?

A) a simple reflex
B) a primary circular reaction
C) a secondary circular reaction
D) a tertiary circular reaction
Question
Newborns at only 0.7 to 71 hours old have been found to imitate adults when the adults have done which of the following?

A) open their mouths or stick out their tongues
B) repeatedly open and close their eyes
C) repeatedly open and "fist up" their hands in front of the newborns
D) purse their lips
Question
Habituation is exemplified when an infant does which of the following?

A) pays attention to a new toy
B) repeats a phrase
C) learns to speak
D) loses interest in a game of peekaboo
Question
A child refers to the "meese" that he saw in the zoo. His mother knows her child saw a moose at the zoo, based on the fact that he knows "geese" refers to more than one goose. What is this child's error an example of?

A) a syntax error
B) an overextension
C) an Morpheme style
D) a referential language style
Question
Olivia has learned to call a toy truck "tru." Now whenever she sees any toy with wheels, she calls it "tru." What is Olivia's response an example of?

A) overextension
B) underextension
C) expressive language style
D) referential language style
Question
Which perspective suggests that parents serve as models for the language development of their children?

A) the maturational perspective
B) the social cognitive perspective
C) the Skinnerian learning theory perspective
D) the Piagetian cognitive-developmental perspective
Question
Which scale is included in the Bayley Scales of Infant Development?

A) a reflex rating scale
B) a language rating scale
C) a behaviour rating scale
D) a maternal behaviour with the child scale
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Deck 5: Infancy: Cognitive Development
1
Language development can be explained entirely as a result of imitation and shaping.
False
2
Learning theorists believe that language is acquired as a result of inborn or prewired factors.
False
3
A 2007 study of children aged 8 to 16 months concluded that infants exposed to baby DVDs scored lower on language development than children with no screen time.
True
4
Calling all four-legged animals doggies is an example of an overextension.
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5
The Bayley Scales may identify sensory or neurological problems.
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6
Imitation after a time delay occurs as early as 6 months of age.
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7
A primary circular reaction involves repeating a behaviour that affects the environment.
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8
Visual recognition memory during infancy is related to later IQ scores.
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k this deck
9
"Motherese" has been shown to slow language development.
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k this deck
10
According to Piaget's cognitive-developmental theory, the first stage of cognitive development is the formal operational stage.
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k this deck
11
Babbling is the first communicative sound an infant makes.
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12
Research findings discussed in the text demonstrate that infants are unable to remember events that occurred to them from day to day.
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k this deck
13
Skinner's perspective is that decreasing reinforcement leads to a faster growth in vocabulary.
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k this deck
14
Infants are unable to imitate others' behaviours until 6 months of age.
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15
According to Piaget, during the fourth substage of sensory motor development, infants coordinate schemas to attain specific goals.
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k this deck
16
Children only speak words and phrases they have heard before.
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17
Imitation is the basis for much of human learning.
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18
Children who are bilingual experience cognitive benefits including enhanced attention control.
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k this deck
19
Piaget theorized that children follow an orderly sequence of stages through cognitive development.
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k this deck
20
Learning theory explains language development primarily as a result of nature.
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k this deck
21
Object permanence is recognition that an object exists when out of sight.
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k this deck
22
Piaget hypothesized that cognitive processes develop in an orderly sequence of stages.
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Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
23
Reading to a child can help foster his or her language development.
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Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
24
The nativist view of language development holds that inborn factors cause children to attend to and acquire language in certain ways.
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k this deck
25
Parents can influence babbling through simple acts of reinforcement such as smiling.
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k this deck
26
There is no evidence of a sensitive period for language development.
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27
Selective reinforcement of children's pronunciation may lead to slower language development.
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k this deck
28
By approximately 6 months of age, infants tend to look for objects that are dropped.
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k this deck
29
Approximately 30% of Canadians report that they speak two languages at home.
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k this deck
30
Newborns' ability to imitate others may have a survival function.
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k this deck
31
The sensitive period for language development takes place between 18 and 24 months.
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32
The case study of Genie supports the idea that the tendency to acquire language is easily learned at any time in life.
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k this deck
33
Language learning is most efficient during the sensitive period that lasts until puberty.
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k this deck
34
According to the nativist perspective, children have an inborn tendency to language learning in the form of neurological "prewiring."
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Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Research on deferred imitation supports Piaget's view of cognitive development.
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k this deck
36
Children who use language to label objects are said to have a referential style of language.
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k this deck
37
Most children can use 500 words by 18 months of age.
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38
During the first year of life, infants' reflexes are stereotypical and inflexible.
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k this deck
39
The situation with Genie, who was locked away for much of her first 13 years of life, supports the nurture view of language development.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Children usually utter their first word at around 12 months of age.
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k this deck
41
Cooing is the same thing as crying.
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k this deck
42
Genie, the girl who was locked away for much of her first 13 years of life, was unable to learn language as well as those who had normal language development.
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Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Research on infant memory has shown that newborns adjust their rate of sucking to hear a recording of their mother reading a story she had read aloud during the last weeks of pregnancy,
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
During the sensorimotor period, infants progress from responding to events with reflexes, or ready-made schemas, to goal-oriented behaviour.
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Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Tertiary circular reactions occur when infants engage in purposeful adaptations of established schemas to specific situations.
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k this deck
46
While observing infants, you witness a tertiary circular reaction. What stage of cognitive development have you observed?

A) the sensorimotor stage
B) the preoperational stage
C) the concrete operational stage
D) the formal operational stage
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Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
47
At what age do most infants begin cooing?

A) at birth
B) at age 1 week
C) at age 2 months
D) at age 4 months
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Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
What conclusions have been reached about the benefits of infant learning DVDs such as Baby Einstein?

A) The older the child when first exposed to such videos, the more positive the impact.
B) Infants develop habituation to such videos and they quickly lose their effectiveness.
C) They have been demonstrated to increase intelligence scores in later life by at least 18 points.
D) They may actually inhibit verbal ability and bonding with caregivers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
A child's Mean Length of Utterance (MLU) decreases as the child develops.
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k this deck
50
Which of the following is an example of a specific nominal?

A) boy
B) fire truck
C) brown dog
D) Mr. Rogers
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Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Which vocalization is the first that resembles human speech?

A) crying
B) cooing
C) babbling
D) making no sound, which shows awareness that all is well
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Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Receptive language tends to outpace expressive language.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
As Michael plays in his crib, his parents overhear him making repetitive sounds such as "babababa" and "dadadada." What term describes this repeating of syllables?

A) cooing
B) echolalia
C) babbling
D) intonation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
What distinguishes primary circular reactions from secondary circular reactions?

A) They are the same; one engages in a more complex behaviour.
B) Primary reactions involve more important behaviours than secondary reactions.
C) Primary reactions involve only reflexes, whereas secondary reactions involve thoughts.
D) Primary reactions focus on the body, whereas secondary reactions focus on the environment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Janet tells her husband that their infant son, Josh, is exhibiting echolalia. What behaviour is she referring to?

A) Josh understands more words than he can say.
B) Josh is speaking words that he does not understand.
C) Josh is repeating syllables.
D) Josh is using his tongue's circular rotation to speak.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Critics of Piaget's cognitive-developmental theory suggest that development tends to be more gradual and continuous than he suggested.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
When children accommodate, they create new schemas for the world.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
Memory improves dramatically between 1 and 2 months of age and then again by 36 months.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
Jenna can tell the difference between a toy she has seen before and a new toy. What term refers to this ability?

A) habituation
B) sensory memory
C) recognition memory
D) classical conditioning
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
What is the most advanced substage in Piaget's sensorimotor period?

A) the primary circular reaction substage
B) the secondary circular reaction substage
C) the invention of new means through mental combinations substage
D) the coordination of secondary schemas substage
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Pamela is trying to place her rectangular block in the rectangular opening of her "know your shape" toy, but it is too wide to fit. She studies the block for some time and then grabs it, rotates it sideways, and the block successful falls in the opening. What substage of sensorimotor development was Pamela demonstrating?

A) the primary circular reaction substage
B) the secondary circular reactions substage
C) the coordination of secondary schemas substage
D) the invention of new means through mental combinations substage
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
Theo is 10 months old. His parents overhear him talking to himself in his crib. His language resembles adult speech in sound, with words rising and falling. What term best describes Theo's vocalizations?

A) echolalia
B) intonation
C) turn-taking
D) vocabulary development
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
Sarah knows that kittens are animals. Her mother tells her that puppies are also animals. Sarah then changes her schema of animals to include puppies. What is Sarah using when she changes her schema to incorporate this new information?

A) assimilation
B) reaction range
C) augmentation
D) accommodation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
A child learns to call a dog "bow-wow" and now calls all animals he sees "bow-wow." What is this child's behaviour an example of?

A) morpheme
B) overextension
C) egocentric speech
D) telegraphic speech
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
What is the relationship between achievements on sensorimotor tests and other test achievements?

A) Achievements on sensorimotor tests are strongly related to subsequent IQ scores.
B) Achievements on sensorimotor tests are strongly related to childhood success in school.
C) Achievements on sensorimotor tests do not reliably predict later school performance.
D) Achievements on sensorimotor tests are strongly related to verbal and symbolic scores obtained in later childhood.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
What is the relationship between MLU and chronological age?

A) Chronological age and MLU are unrelated.
B) As chronological age increases, MLU tends to increase.
C) MLU tends to decrease initially because other developmental challenges also occur when chronological age increases.
D) Chronological age increases across time, whereas MLU remains the same across time.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
What is the definition of the referential language style?

A) using personal pronouns to refer to the self
B) using language to label objects in the environment
C) using language as a means for engaging in social interaction
D) using words that make no particular reference, but allow practice with the vocal cords
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
What substage of sensorimotor development serves as a transition to the symbolic thought of the next stage?

A) the tertiary circular reaction substage
B) the secondary circular reaction substage
C) the coordination of secondary schemas substage
D) the invention of new means through mental combinations substage
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Jennifer is eager to know when her son will start babbling. What is her pediatrician most likely to tell her?

A) It occurs before cooing.
B) It occurs after the ability to use intonation.
C) It appears between 6 and 9 months of age.
D) It is strongly related to words the child is trying to say.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
Piaget closely observed the activities of children and noted that they tend to experiment with the environment. Because of this behaviour, what did Piaget consider children to be?

A) scientists
B) copiers
C) comedians
D) students
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
What is the definition of a specific nominal?

A) a proper noun
B) a personal pronoun
C) a class of objects
D) a word longer than two syllables
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
Jennifer is curious about her son's cries and coos. What is her pediatrician most likely to tell her?

A) They are based entirely on know-how.
B) They are innate, but modified by experience.
C) They are based entirely on genetic encoding.
D) They are accidental noises that are soon replaced by meaningful sounds.
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Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.
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73
What is the definition of the mean length of utterance?

A) the average number of morphemes a child uses in a sentence
B) the total number of sounds a child makes when trying to express herself
C) the average number of letters in the child's usual utterances
D) the complex arrangement of single words used to express complex thoughts
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74
Lacey is 7 months old. She shakes a rattle so it will make a noise she likes. What is Lacey's action an example of?

A) a simple reflex
B) a primary circular reaction
C) a secondary circular reaction
D) a tertiary circular reaction
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75
Newborns at only 0.7 to 71 hours old have been found to imitate adults when the adults have done which of the following?

A) open their mouths or stick out their tongues
B) repeatedly open and close their eyes
C) repeatedly open and "fist up" their hands in front of the newborns
D) purse their lips
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76
Habituation is exemplified when an infant does which of the following?

A) pays attention to a new toy
B) repeats a phrase
C) learns to speak
D) loses interest in a game of peekaboo
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77
A child refers to the "meese" that he saw in the zoo. His mother knows her child saw a moose at the zoo, based on the fact that he knows "geese" refers to more than one goose. What is this child's error an example of?

A) a syntax error
B) an overextension
C) an Morpheme style
D) a referential language style
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78
Olivia has learned to call a toy truck "tru." Now whenever she sees any toy with wheels, she calls it "tru." What is Olivia's response an example of?

A) overextension
B) underextension
C) expressive language style
D) referential language style
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79
Which perspective suggests that parents serve as models for the language development of their children?

A) the maturational perspective
B) the social cognitive perspective
C) the Skinnerian learning theory perspective
D) the Piagetian cognitive-developmental perspective
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80
Which scale is included in the Bayley Scales of Infant Development?

A) a reflex rating scale
B) a language rating scale
C) a behaviour rating scale
D) a maternal behaviour with the child scale
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 170 flashcards in this deck.