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level: Level 1

Questions and Answers List

level questions: Level 1

QuestionAnswer
"learned" responses triggered by specific stimulationunlearned
begins with a sudden, long burst of crying followed by a long pause and gaspingpain cry
a more intense version of a basic crymad cry
starts softly and then gradually becomes more intense; it usually occurs when a baby is hungry or tiredbasic cry
ability to interact with peoplesocial
ability to control body functions (breathing, temp regulation)autonomic
ability to maintain a state (E.g. alert)state
ability to control body movements and activity levelmotor
what are the four systems (NBAS)1. autonomic 2. motor 3. state 4. social
the baby is calm with eyes open and attentive; the baby seems to be deliberately inspecting the environmentalert inactivity
the baby alternates from being still and breathing regularly to moving gently and breathing irregularly; eyes are closed throughoutsleeping
the baby cries vigorously, usually accompanied by agitated but uncoordinated motioncrying
the baby's eyes are open but they seem unfocused; the arms or legs moves in bursts of uncoordinated motionwaking activity
what are the four diff states (newborns state)1. alert inactivity 2. waking activity 3. crying 4. sleeping
an infant is wrapped tightly in a blanket. provides warmth and tactile stimulation that usually works well to soothe a babyswaddling
represents the newborn's first venture of interpersonal communicationcrying
a healthy baby dies suddenly with no apparent reasonsudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)
characteristics of infants indicate a consistent style or pattern to an infant's behaviortemperament
sleep in which heart rate, breathing, and brain activity are steadyregular (nonREM) sleep
sleep in which an infant's eyes dart rapidly beneath the eyelids while the body is quite activeirregular or rapid-eye movement (REM) sleep
what month old that infants are particularly vulnerable to SIDS2 to 4 months old
best way to ensure that babies get the nourishment they neededbreast-feeding
refers to the extent to which a child is generally happy, active, vocal, and regularly seeks interesting stimulationsurgency/ extroversion
refers to the extent to which a child can focus attention, is not readily distracted and can inhibit responseseffortful control
refers to the extent to which a child is angry, fearful, frustrated, shy, and not easily soothednegative affect
blank is more rapid in infancy than during other period after birthgrowth
is the smallest pattern that can be distinguished dependablyvisual acuity
views many human behaviors as successful adaptations to the environmentevolutionary psychology
enduring socioemotional relationships between infants and their caregiversattachment
the knowledge, that within limits, youngsters can act their world intentionally; this occurs when autonomy and shame and doubt are in balancewill
is an openness to new experience tempered by wariness that discomfort, or danger may arisehope
balance between individual initiative and the willingness to cooperate with otherspurpose
child develops a sense of control over their own actionsautonomy vs shame and doubt
infants are dependent on caregivers to meet their needs and provide comfortbasic trust vs mistrust
play becomes more purposeful and includes playing the role of mother, father, teacher, athlete, or writerinitiative vs guilt
one of the leading researchers on theory of mind, named blank; he believes that children's theory of mind moves through 3 phases during the preschool yearshenry wellman
what are the 4 phases of attachment1. preattachment 2. attachment in the making 3. true attachment 4. reciprocal relationship
what are the forms of attachment1. secure attachment 2. avoidant attachment 3. resistant attachment 4. disorganized (disoriented) attachment
"why do you do this? I need you desperately and yet you just leave me without warning. I get so angry when you're like this"resistant attachment
"you left me again. I always have to take care of myself."avoidant attachment
"what's happening? I want you to be here, but you left me and now you're back. I don't get what's going on!"disorganized (disoriented) attachment
babies see attachment figure as a special persontrue attachment
they cope with separation more effectively because they can anticipate that the caregiver will returnreciprocal relationship
babies respond to differently primary caregiverattachment in the making
infants behaviors evoke a response in adultspreattachment
this person is dependable, caring, plus concerned about my needs and willing to meet thempositive model
this person is uncaring, undependable, unresponsive, and even annoyed by my needsnegative model
the baby is not upset when the mother leaves and when she returns, may ignore her by looking or turning awayavoidant attachment
the baby is upset when the mother leaves, and it remains upset or even angry when she returns and is difficult to consoleresistant attachment
the baby seems confused when she returns, as if not really understanding what's really happening. The baby often behaves in a contradictory ways, such as nearing the mother when she returns but not looking at herdisorganized (disoriented) attachment
any behavior that benefits another personprosocial
a prosocial behavior such as helping and sharing in which an individual does not benefit directly from his or her behavioraltruism
scaffolding the child's play and rendering it more sophisticatedplaymate
helps children learn how to initiate interactions, make joint decisions, and resolve conflictscoach
arranging play dates and official play activitiessocial director
help children resolve disputes, share, and identify mutually acceptable activitiesmediators
structuring information to be remembered so that related information is placed togetherorganization
embellishing information to be remembered to make it more memorableelaboration
permanent storehouse of knowledge that has unlimited capacitylong-term memory
relatively small number of thoughts and ideas can be stored brieflyworking memory
thurston's has (how many) distinct abilities7
he studied intelligence for more than 30 years and he began by asking how adults solve problems on intelligence testrobert sternberg
who proposed the hierarchical theory with 3 levels?john caroll
caroll's hierarchical theory is, in essence, a compromise between the 2 views of intelligence--- what are they?general vs distinct abilities
they developed a test to measure children's mental age or level at which they solved problemsbinet & simon
What are the 2 dimensions of parenting?1. degree of warmth and responsiveness 2. control
Involves analyzing problems and generating different solutionsanalytic ability
involves dealing adaptively with novel situations and problemscreative ability
involves knowing what solution or plan will actually workpractical ability
provides neither warmth nor controluninvolved parenting
offers warmth an caring but little parental controlpermissive parenting
combines high control with little warmthauthoritarian parenting
combines a fair degree of parental control with being warm and responsive tp children; (BALANCE)authoritative parenting
telling a child what o do, when, and whydirect instruction
parents indicate whether a behavior is appropriate and should be continued or is inappropriate and should stoppedfeedback
children learn a great deal from parents simply by watching them-- leads to imitationmodelling
learning what should not be done by observing the behaviorcounter imitation
any action that discourages the recurrence of the response that it follows; applying an aversive stimulus or removing an attractive stimuluspunishment
any action that increases the likelihood of a behavior will be repeated in the futurereinforcement
unwittingly reinforcing a behavior, you want to discouragenegative reinforcement trap
this one of the major reflexes that the baby's toes fan out when the sole of the foot is stroked from heel to toebabinski
a baby's eyes close in response to bright light or loud noiseblink
a baby throws its arms out and then inward (as if embracing) in response to loud noise or when its head fallsmoro
significance (major reflexes): protects the eyesblink
significance (major reflexes): may help a baby cling to its mothermoro
significance (major reflexes): perhaps a remnant of evolutionbabinski
what score that it signals life-threatening situation that requires emergency medical care3 or less
what score that indicates a baby who is in good physical condition7 or more
what score means that the newborn needs special attention and care4-6
how many hours does the infants sleep daily16-18 hours
many eastern parents lift a baby to the shoulder and walk or gently rock the baby's back, or give baby a pacifier (TRUE OR FALSE)false; western
infants protection from dangerreflexes
how many hours does the infants spend each day crying?2-3 hours
what are the risk factors associate with sids?-born prematurely or with low birth weight -more vulnerable when their parents smoke -when baby sleep on its stomach (face down)
worldwide, about one in five children under age 5 is malnourished (TRUE OR FALSE)false; one in four children
worldwide, about one in four children under age of 7 is malnourished (TURE OR FALSE)false; under age of 5
newborns have a keen sense of?smell
newborns are sensitive to?touch
infants at 4-6 months use blank (2 words); the difference between the images of objects in each eye to discern depthretinal disparity
by 7 months, infants use several cues for depth that depend on the arrangement of objects in the environment. These are sometimes called blank because they're the same cues that artists use to convey depth in drawings and paintingspictorial cues