Deck 5: A--Nature, Nurture, and Human Development

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A researcher wishing to study the effects of attachment style in infancy on friendship formation in kindergarten MUST use a longitudinal research design.
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Piaget called the third stage of intellectual development the sensorimotor stage.
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Researchers have found that exercise programs designed to increase older people's physical activity levels also lead to improvements in their memory and cognition.
Question
Although new mothers may claim that their newborns (less than 3 days old) can recognize the sound of their voice, there is no research evidence to support this claim.
Question
Except for your red blood cells, all of your cells contain a nucleus, which includes strands of hereditary material called chromosomes.
Question
Assimilation means applying an old schema to new objects or problems.
Question
Temperament remains fairly consistent across the lifespan.
Question
The patterns of attachment originally found in the United States have been consistently observed in every culture that has been studied.
Question
A cohort is a group of people born at a particular time or a group of people who enter an organization at a particular time.
Question
Gender differences in play behavior, for example, are much more obvious in groups of boys and groups of girls than they are when individual boys and girls are tested in the laboratory.
Question
The Strange Situation was developed to measure the attachment style of infants.
Question
Being born with a low birthweight causes impaired brain development, leading to academic and behavior problems as the child ages.
Question
Selective attrition is a greater problem with longitudinal research than with cross-sectional research.
Question
Piaget believed that his four stages represented distinct levels of development, with major changes in thinking from stage to stage. After several decades of research, the vast majority of developmental psychologists would agree with this view.
Question
Both Piaget and Vygotsky implied that we start with infant cognition and eventually attain adult thinking, which we practice from then on.
Question
If monozygotic twins resemble each other on some dimension more than dizygotic twins do, researchers generally conclude there is a genetic basis for that dimension.
Question
A mother gives birth to a pair of twins: one boy and one girl. These twins must be dizygotic.
Question
Teenagers who believe in the "personal fable" are especially likely to be cautious individuals and to avoid taking risks.
Question
Research on twins separated at birth has led scientists to begin identifying the genes that cause specific behaviors, such as hobbies and other preferences.
Question
Tommy tells his mom about an event at preschool in a way that assumes his mom knows what he is talking about. Developmental psychologists would describe Tommy's thinking as egocentric.
Question
In Piaget's terminology, a ____________________ sometimes gets assimilated and sometimes gets accommodated.
Question
The research findings point to the conclusion that children placed in day care do worse on a variety of social and cognitive measures compared to children who were not in day care.
Question
Parenting styles tend to be consistent within a family (for example, parents who are authoritarian with their first child tend to be authoritarian with their other children).
Question
____________________ is the tendency to be active or inactive, outgoing or reserved, and to respond vigorously or quietly to new stimuli.
Question
According to Piaget young children's thought is ____________________.
Question
Genes located on the X chromosome are known as ____________________ genes.
Question
According to Piaget, children in the ____________________ stage of cognitive development lack the concept of object permanence.
Question
An indifferent parenting style causes children to be impulsive and out-of-control.
Question
Red-green color blindness depends on a recessive gene on the X chromosome. Red-green color blindness is therefore more common in ____________________ than in ____________________.
Question
Sections along each chromosome, known as ____________________, control the chemical reactions that direct development.
Question
An investigator who uses a ____________________ design examines different groups of people at the same time.
Question
Newborns who hear the same sound repeatedly show ____________________, which means ____________________.
Question
Imagine a married couple that has five children. If this family is typical, the research strongly suggests that the oldest (first-born) child will have a higher IQ than the other children in the family.
Question
____________________ twins develop from a single fertilized egg (zygote) and therefore have identical genes.
Question
The last of Piaget's stages of cognitive development is the ____________________.
Question
A research design that combines the advantages of both cross-sectional and longitudinal designs is known as ____________________.
Question
A ____________________ is a group of people born at a particular time or a group of people who enter an organization at a particular time.
Question
____________________ is the tendency for certain kinds of people to drop out of a study.
Question
A ____________________ study follows a single group of individuals as they develop.
Question
Psychologists say that a young child lacks, but gradually develops, ____________________, which is an understanding that other people have a mind too and that each person knows some things that other people don't know.
Question
According to ____________________ theory, we cope with our fear of death by avoiding thoughts about death and by affirming a worldview that provides self-esteem, hope, and value in life.
Question
To understand the effects of genes on physical characteristics and behavior, one has to understand the difference between dominant and recessive genes. Define the terms "dominant" and "recessive" in terms of genes. Based on your understanding of genetics, state what color eyes you would have if you had one gene for brown eyes and one gene for blue eyes and explain why?
Question
Researchers often use twins to study whether variation in a given behavior depends more on the variation in genes than on variation in the environment. Define the difference between monozygotic twins and dizygotic twins. If a researcher had two sets of twins (one pair of dizygotic twins and one pair of monozygotic twins) and both sets resembled each other in terms of their sense of humor, what is the researcher likely to conclude about the heritability of that trait?
Question
There are a number of research design methods that are employed to study human development. Briefly define the following types of research design methods: cross-sectional, longitudinal, and sequential designs. Give one example of a weakness of cross-sectional and longitudinal designs and explain how a sequential design attempts to address these limitations.
Question
An adolescent's concern with decisions about the future and the quest for self-understanding has been called an ____________________.
Question
Children during Piaget's preoperational stage of development have the concept of ____________________ but not the concept of ____________________.
Question
Define theory of mind and give an example of a situation involving a child that has not yet developed theory of mind.
Question
According to Vygotsky, every child has a ____________________, which is the distance between what a child can do alone and what the child can do with help.
Question
According to Piaget, a child constructs new mental processes as he or she interacts with the environment. The following terms represent core cognitive processes in Piaget's theory: schemata, assimilation, accommodation, and equilibrium. Define each term and identify which one of the processes best represents the following two scenarios:
According to Piaget, a child constructs new mental processes as he or she interacts with the environment. The following terms represent core cognitive processes in Piaget's theory: schemata, assimilation, accommodation, and equilibrium. Define each term and identify which one of the processes best represents the following two scenarios:  <div style=padding-top: 35px>
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Deck 5: A--Nature, Nurture, and Human Development
1
A researcher wishing to study the effects of attachment style in infancy on friendship formation in kindergarten MUST use a longitudinal research design.
True
2
Piaget called the third stage of intellectual development the sensorimotor stage.
False
3
Researchers have found that exercise programs designed to increase older people's physical activity levels also lead to improvements in their memory and cognition.
True
4
Although new mothers may claim that their newborns (less than 3 days old) can recognize the sound of their voice, there is no research evidence to support this claim.
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5
Except for your red blood cells, all of your cells contain a nucleus, which includes strands of hereditary material called chromosomes.
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6
Assimilation means applying an old schema to new objects or problems.
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7
Temperament remains fairly consistent across the lifespan.
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8
The patterns of attachment originally found in the United States have been consistently observed in every culture that has been studied.
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9
A cohort is a group of people born at a particular time or a group of people who enter an organization at a particular time.
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10
Gender differences in play behavior, for example, are much more obvious in groups of boys and groups of girls than they are when individual boys and girls are tested in the laboratory.
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11
The Strange Situation was developed to measure the attachment style of infants.
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12
Being born with a low birthweight causes impaired brain development, leading to academic and behavior problems as the child ages.
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13
Selective attrition is a greater problem with longitudinal research than with cross-sectional research.
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14
Piaget believed that his four stages represented distinct levels of development, with major changes in thinking from stage to stage. After several decades of research, the vast majority of developmental psychologists would agree with this view.
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k this deck
15
Both Piaget and Vygotsky implied that we start with infant cognition and eventually attain adult thinking, which we practice from then on.
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k this deck
16
If monozygotic twins resemble each other on some dimension more than dizygotic twins do, researchers generally conclude there is a genetic basis for that dimension.
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17
A mother gives birth to a pair of twins: one boy and one girl. These twins must be dizygotic.
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18
Teenagers who believe in the "personal fable" are especially likely to be cautious individuals and to avoid taking risks.
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k this deck
19
Research on twins separated at birth has led scientists to begin identifying the genes that cause specific behaviors, such as hobbies and other preferences.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Tommy tells his mom about an event at preschool in a way that assumes his mom knows what he is talking about. Developmental psychologists would describe Tommy's thinking as egocentric.
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k this deck
21
In Piaget's terminology, a ____________________ sometimes gets assimilated and sometimes gets accommodated.
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k this deck
22
The research findings point to the conclusion that children placed in day care do worse on a variety of social and cognitive measures compared to children who were not in day care.
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k this deck
23
Parenting styles tend to be consistent within a family (for example, parents who are authoritarian with their first child tend to be authoritarian with their other children).
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k this deck
24
____________________ is the tendency to be active or inactive, outgoing or reserved, and to respond vigorously or quietly to new stimuli.
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k this deck
25
According to Piaget young children's thought is ____________________.
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26
Genes located on the X chromosome are known as ____________________ genes.
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27
According to Piaget, children in the ____________________ stage of cognitive development lack the concept of object permanence.
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k this deck
28
An indifferent parenting style causes children to be impulsive and out-of-control.
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k this deck
29
Red-green color blindness depends on a recessive gene on the X chromosome. Red-green color blindness is therefore more common in ____________________ than in ____________________.
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k this deck
30
Sections along each chromosome, known as ____________________, control the chemical reactions that direct development.
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k this deck
31
An investigator who uses a ____________________ design examines different groups of people at the same time.
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k this deck
32
Newborns who hear the same sound repeatedly show ____________________, which means ____________________.
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k this deck
33
Imagine a married couple that has five children. If this family is typical, the research strongly suggests that the oldest (first-born) child will have a higher IQ than the other children in the family.
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Unlock for access to all 49 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
34
____________________ twins develop from a single fertilized egg (zygote) and therefore have identical genes.
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k this deck
35
The last of Piaget's stages of cognitive development is the ____________________.
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36
A research design that combines the advantages of both cross-sectional and longitudinal designs is known as ____________________.
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k this deck
37
A ____________________ is a group of people born at a particular time or a group of people who enter an organization at a particular time.
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38
____________________ is the tendency for certain kinds of people to drop out of a study.
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39
A ____________________ study follows a single group of individuals as they develop.
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40
Psychologists say that a young child lacks, but gradually develops, ____________________, which is an understanding that other people have a mind too and that each person knows some things that other people don't know.
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Unlock for access to all 49 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
41
According to ____________________ theory, we cope with our fear of death by avoiding thoughts about death and by affirming a worldview that provides self-esteem, hope, and value in life.
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Unlock for access to all 49 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
42
To understand the effects of genes on physical characteristics and behavior, one has to understand the difference between dominant and recessive genes. Define the terms "dominant" and "recessive" in terms of genes. Based on your understanding of genetics, state what color eyes you would have if you had one gene for brown eyes and one gene for blue eyes and explain why?
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k this deck
43
Researchers often use twins to study whether variation in a given behavior depends more on the variation in genes than on variation in the environment. Define the difference between monozygotic twins and dizygotic twins. If a researcher had two sets of twins (one pair of dizygotic twins and one pair of monozygotic twins) and both sets resembled each other in terms of their sense of humor, what is the researcher likely to conclude about the heritability of that trait?
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k this deck
44
There are a number of research design methods that are employed to study human development. Briefly define the following types of research design methods: cross-sectional, longitudinal, and sequential designs. Give one example of a weakness of cross-sectional and longitudinal designs and explain how a sequential design attempts to address these limitations.
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45
An adolescent's concern with decisions about the future and the quest for self-understanding has been called an ____________________.
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k this deck
46
Children during Piaget's preoperational stage of development have the concept of ____________________ but not the concept of ____________________.
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k this deck
47
Define theory of mind and give an example of a situation involving a child that has not yet developed theory of mind.
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48
According to Vygotsky, every child has a ____________________, which is the distance between what a child can do alone and what the child can do with help.
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49
According to Piaget, a child constructs new mental processes as he or she interacts with the environment. The following terms represent core cognitive processes in Piaget's theory: schemata, assimilation, accommodation, and equilibrium. Define each term and identify which one of the processes best represents the following two scenarios:
According to Piaget, a child constructs new mental processes as he or she interacts with the environment. The following terms represent core cognitive processes in Piaget's theory: schemata, assimilation, accommodation, and equilibrium. Define each term and identify which one of the processes best represents the following two scenarios:
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