Deck 5: A: Perceptual and Motor Development

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Question
Researchers often measure an infant's heart rate, facial expression, or head movements to see if the infant responds differently to two different stimuli.
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Question
Infants' colour perception is similar to adults' by three or four months of age.
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Infants best hear sounds with pitches that are in the range of human speech.
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Infants can differentiate sour, salty, bitter, and sweet tastes.
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A sign of possible hearing impairment is that a two-month-old does not imitate speech sounds and simple words.
Question
Parents should be concerned about their baby's hearing if the baby has repeated ear infections.
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When a stimulus, such as a tone, is presented to an infant over and over again, the infant will eventually habituate to the tone.
Question
Young infants cannot use motion to define objects.
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Infants hear as well as adults.
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Young infants group features together when they are the same colour.
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When objects are near, greater disparity in retinal images occurs.
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At about four months of age, infants use retinal disparity as a depth cue.
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Newborns don't seem to feel pain.
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Meningitis is the leading cause of hearing impairment in newborns.
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By four months, babies have mastered size constancy, brightness constancy, colour constancy, and shape constancy.
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When testing an infant's visual acuity, looking at plain and patterned stimuli equally means that the infant cannot see the pattern.
Question
Young babies cannot use odour to identify their mothers' breast milk.
Question
One sign of possible hearing impairment is that an eight- or nine-month-old does not respond to his/her name.
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Babies who are one and a half months old who cannot crawl are afraid when they are placed on the deep side of the visual cliff.
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An infant can detect changes in the taste of his mother's breast milk that reflect the mother's diet.
Question
After a stimulus is presented repeatedly, infants pay more attention to it. This increase in attention is called habituation.
Question
When relative size is used to infer depth, people judge smaller objects as closer.
Question
Moving the legs alternately while transferring body weight from one foot to the other is an essential element of walking.
Question
Very young infants do not react differently to faces versus non-faces.
Question
Le Grand, Mondloch, Maurer, & Brent (2001) found that early visual experience is necessary for the normal development of face processing.
Question
The cues for balance come from the eyes, not from the inner ears.
Question
Most babies take their first steps at 24 months.
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Children typically step spontaneously around 10 months of age.
Question
By seven or eight months, most babies can stand with help.
Question
Paying attention is all about focusing attention on the target task.
Question
By four months of age, most babies can sit upright with support.
Question
ADHD is caused by eating too much sugar.
Question
ADHD is often treated with stimulant drugs.
Question
When interposition is used to infer depth, people judge partially obscured objects as more distant.
Question
The ability to maintain an upright posture is one component skill of walking.
Question
Children with ADHD may be unusually energetic, fidgety, and unable to keep still.
Question
More girls than boys are diagnosed with ADHD.
Question
Older preschoolers show more focused attention than do younger preschoolers.
Question
Attention is the process by which we select information that will be processed further.
Question
When texture gradient is used to infer depth, people judge blurred objects to be near.
Question
Most one-year-olds use spoons like adults do.
Question
A preference for one hand over the other emerges by the first birthday.
Question
Almost all school children can meet fitness standards on fitness tests.
Question
Most infants cannot coordinate the motions of their hands until they are 12 months old.
Question
Children spend nearly half of their time in physical education classes standing around rather than being active.
Question
Children develop better skills when their coaches emphasize winning.
Question
Sports can give children an opportunity to learn important social skills, such as how to work effectively in a group.
Question
Combining component motor skills in proper sequence into a coherent, working whole is called differentiation.
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Deck 5: A: Perceptual and Motor Development
1
Researchers often measure an infant's heart rate, facial expression, or head movements to see if the infant responds differently to two different stimuli.
True
2
Infants' colour perception is similar to adults' by three or four months of age.
True
3
Infants best hear sounds with pitches that are in the range of human speech.
True
4
Infants can differentiate sour, salty, bitter, and sweet tastes.
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5
A sign of possible hearing impairment is that a two-month-old does not imitate speech sounds and simple words.
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6
Parents should be concerned about their baby's hearing if the baby has repeated ear infections.
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7
When a stimulus, such as a tone, is presented to an infant over and over again, the infant will eventually habituate to the tone.
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8
Young infants cannot use motion to define objects.
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9
Infants hear as well as adults.
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10
Young infants group features together when they are the same colour.
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11
When objects are near, greater disparity in retinal images occurs.
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12
At about four months of age, infants use retinal disparity as a depth cue.
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13
Newborns don't seem to feel pain.
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14
Meningitis is the leading cause of hearing impairment in newborns.
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15
By four months, babies have mastered size constancy, brightness constancy, colour constancy, and shape constancy.
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16
When testing an infant's visual acuity, looking at plain and patterned stimuli equally means that the infant cannot see the pattern.
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17
Young babies cannot use odour to identify their mothers' breast milk.
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18
One sign of possible hearing impairment is that an eight- or nine-month-old does not respond to his/her name.
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19
Babies who are one and a half months old who cannot crawl are afraid when they are placed on the deep side of the visual cliff.
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20
An infant can detect changes in the taste of his mother's breast milk that reflect the mother's diet.
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21
After a stimulus is presented repeatedly, infants pay more attention to it. This increase in attention is called habituation.
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22
When relative size is used to infer depth, people judge smaller objects as closer.
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23
Moving the legs alternately while transferring body weight from one foot to the other is an essential element of walking.
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24
Very young infants do not react differently to faces versus non-faces.
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25
Le Grand, Mondloch, Maurer, & Brent (2001) found that early visual experience is necessary for the normal development of face processing.
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26
The cues for balance come from the eyes, not from the inner ears.
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27
Most babies take their first steps at 24 months.
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28
Children typically step spontaneously around 10 months of age.
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29
By seven or eight months, most babies can stand with help.
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30
Paying attention is all about focusing attention on the target task.
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31
By four months of age, most babies can sit upright with support.
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32
ADHD is caused by eating too much sugar.
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33
ADHD is often treated with stimulant drugs.
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34
When interposition is used to infer depth, people judge partially obscured objects as more distant.
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35
The ability to maintain an upright posture is one component skill of walking.
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36
Children with ADHD may be unusually energetic, fidgety, and unable to keep still.
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37
More girls than boys are diagnosed with ADHD.
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38
Older preschoolers show more focused attention than do younger preschoolers.
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39
Attention is the process by which we select information that will be processed further.
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40
When texture gradient is used to infer depth, people judge blurred objects to be near.
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41
Most one-year-olds use spoons like adults do.
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42
A preference for one hand over the other emerges by the first birthday.
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43
Almost all school children can meet fitness standards on fitness tests.
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44
Most infants cannot coordinate the motions of their hands until they are 12 months old.
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45
Children spend nearly half of their time in physical education classes standing around rather than being active.
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46
Children develop better skills when their coaches emphasize winning.
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47
Sports can give children an opportunity to learn important social skills, such as how to work effectively in a group.
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48
Combining component motor skills in proper sequence into a coherent, working whole is called differentiation.
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