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Chapter 5 Infancy: Physical Development

Chapter 5 Infancy: Physical Development. Infancy: Physical Development: Truth or Fiction?. The head of the newborn child doubles in length by adulthood, but the legs increase in length about five times. Infants triple their birth weight within a year.

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Chapter 5 Infancy: Physical Development

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  1. Chapter 5Infancy: Physical Development

  2. Infancy: Physical Development: Truth or Fiction? • The head of the newborn child doubles in length by adulthood, but the legs increase in length about five times. • Infants triple their birth weight within a year.

  3. Infancy: Physical Development: Truth or Fiction? • Breastfeeding helps prevent obesity later in life. • A child’s brain reaches half of its adult weight by the age of 1 year.

  4. Infancy: Physical Development: Truth or Fiction? • The cerebral cortex – the outer layer of the brain that is vital to human thought and reason – is only one-eighth of an inch thick. • Native American Hopi infants spend the first year of life strapped to a board, yet they begin to walk at about the same time as children who are reared in other cultures.

  5. Infancy: Physical Development: Truth or Fiction? • Infants need to have experience crawling before they develop fear of heights.

  6. Infancy: Physical Development Physical Growth and Development

  7. What are the Sequences of Physical Development? • Cephalocaudal Development • Upper part of the head to the lower parts of the body • Proximodistal Development • Trunk outward – from body’s central axis toward periphery • Differentiation • Tendency of behavior to become more specific and distinct

  8. What Patterns of Growth Occur in Infancy? • Weight doubles at about 5 months; triples by first birthday • Height increase by 50% in first year • Infants grow 4 to 6 inches in second year; and gain 4 to 7 pounds • Growth appears continuous but actually occurs in spurts

  9. Figure 5.1 Growth Curves for Weight and Height (Length) From Birth to Age 2 Years

  10. Figure 5.2 Changes in the Proportions of the Body

  11. What is Failure to Thrive? • Growth impairment during infancy and early childhood • Causes may be organic or non-organic • Biologically based or non-biologically based • Links to physical, cognitive, behavioral and emotional problems • Deficiencies in caregiver-child interaction may play a role • Canalization – catch up growth once FTT is resolved

  12. What are the Nutritional Needs of Children? • Infants require breast milk or iron fortified formula • Solid foods may be introduced about 4 to 6 months • Iron-enriched cereal, strained fruits, vegetables and meats • Whole cow’s milk delayed until 9 to 12 months • Teething biscuits in later part of first year

  13. Guidelines for Infant Nutrition • Build up variety of foods • Avoid overfeeding or underfeeding • Don’t restrict fat and cholesterol • Don’t overdo high-fiber foods • Avoid items with added sugar and salt • Encourage high-iron foods U.S. Dept of Agriculture, 2000

  14. Developing in a World of Diversity Alleviating Protein-Energy Malnutrition (PEM)

  15. Why do Women Bottle-feed or Breastfeed their Children? • Choice to breastfeed is influenced by • Attitudes regarding benefits for bonding and infant health • Fear of pain, unease with breastfeeding and public breastfeeding • Domestic and occupational arrangements • Community and familial support • Level of education

  16. What are the Advantages and Disadvantages of Breast Milk? • Advantages of breast milk • Conforms to digestion process • Possesses needed nutrients • Contains mother’s antibodies • Helps protect against infant diarrhea • Is less likely, than formula, to cause allergies • Disadvantages of breast milk • HIV, alcohol, drugs and environmental hazards may be transmitted through breast milk • Physical demands on mother

  17. Development of the Brain and Nervous System

  18. What are Neurons? • Basic unit of nervous system, receive and transmit messages • Neurons vary according to function and location, but all contain • Cell Body • Dendrites • Axon • Neurotransmitters

  19. Figure 5.3 Anatomy of a Neuron

  20. How do Neurons Develop? • As child matures • Axons grow in length • Dendrites and axon terminals proliferate • Connection networks become more complex • Myelin Sheaths • Makes messages more efficient • Myelination occurs with maturation • Inhibition of myelination results in disease

  21. What is the Brain? • Command center of organism • Brain of neonate weighs less than one pound • By first birthday, the brain triples in weight, reaching nearly 70% of adult weight

  22. Figure 5.4 Growth of Body Systems as a Percentage of Total Postnatal Growth

  23. Structures of the Brain • Medulla • Controls basic body functions - heartbeat, respiration • Cerebellum • Maintains balance, control motor behavior, coordinate eye movements with body sensations • Cerebrum • Allows human learning, thought, memory and language

  24. Figure 5.5 Structures of the Brain

  25. How Does the Brain Develop? • Growth Spurts in Brain Development • Prenatal – fourth and fifth months • Proliferation of neurons • Prenatal – 25th week through 2 years old • Proliferation of dendrites and axon terminals

  26. Figure 5.6 Increase in Neural Connections in the Brain

  27. Brain Development in Infancy • Myelination • At birth brain areas well myelinated include • Heartbeat and respiration • Sleeping and arousal • Reflex activity • Myelination of sensory areas • Hearing – begins about 6th month of pregnancy and continues to age 4 • Vision – begins shortly before full term but develop rapidly

  28. How do Nature and Nurture Affect the Development of the Brain? • Brain development is affected by maturation (nature) and sensory stimulation and motor activity (nurture) • Rats in enriched environment • More dendrites and axon terminals • Human infants have more neural connections than adults • If activated by experience, connection survives • If not activated, connection does not survive

  29. Motor Development

  30. What is Motor Development? • Developments in the activity of muscles, and is connected with changes in posture, movement, and coordination • Follows cephalocaudal and proximodistal patterns • Lifting and holding head before torso • Voluntary reaching • Locomotion • Sequence: rolling over, sitting up, crawling, creeping, walking, running

  31. What is Motor Development?

  32. What are the Roles of Nature and Nurture in Motor Development? • Maturation (nature) • Myelination and differentiation is needed for certain voluntary motor activities • Experience (nurture) • Experimentation to achieve milestones • Slight effect in training to accelerate motor skills

  33. Sensory and Perceptual Development

  34. How do Sensation and Perception Develop in the Infant? • Process of integrating disjointed sensations into meaningful patterns through perception • Focus on vision and hearing • Most research is one these areas

  35. Development of Visual Acuity and Peripheral Vision • Neonates are nearsighted • Greatest gains in visual acuity between birth and 6 months • By about 3 to 5 years of age, approximate adult levels • Neonates have poor peripheral vision • Perceive stimuli within 30 degree angle • By 7 weeks increases to 45 degrees • By 6 months of age, equal to adult

  36. What Captures the Attention of Infants? How do Visual Preferences Develop? • Neonates attend longer to stripes than blobs • By 8 to 12 weeks, prefer curved lines over straight • Infants prefer faces • Discriminate maternal and stranger faces • Prefer attractive faces • Pay most attention to edges

  37. Figure 5.11 Preferences in Visual Stimuli in 2-Month-Olds

  38. Figure 5.12 Eye Movements of 1- and 2-Month Olds

  39. How do Researchers Determine Whether Infants will “Go Off the Deep End”? • Depth Perception • Develops around 6 months (onset of crawling) • Research using the Visual Cliff • Gibson and Walk (1960) • Relationship between crawling and fear of heights

  40. Figure 5.13 The Visual Cliff

  41. What are Perceptual Constancies? How do they Develop? • Perceptual constancy – perception of object remains stable although sensations may differ under various conditions • Size constancy – perception of object’s size remains stable although retinal size may differ • Appears by 2 1/2 to 3 months • Shape constancy – perception of object‘s shape remains stable although shape on retina may change • Appears by 4 to 5 months

  42. A Closer Look Strategies for Studying the Development of Shape Constancy

  43. What are Perceptual Constancies? How do they Develop? • Perceptual constancy – perception of object remains stable although sensations may differ under various conditions • Size constancy – perception of object’s size remains stable although retinal size may differ • Appears by 2 1/2 to 3 months • Shape constancy – perception of object‘s shape remains stable although shape on retina may change • Appears by 4 to 5 months

  44. How Does the Sense of Hearing Develop in Infancy? • Neonates can orient toward direction of a sound • 18 months locate sounds as well as adults • By 3 1/2 months discriminate caregivers’ voices • Infants perceive most speech sounds present in world languages • By 10 to 12 months, lose capacity to discriminate sounds not found in native language

  45. Figure 5.14 Declining Ability to Discriminate the Sounds of Foreign Languages

  46. A Closer Look Effects of Early Exposure to Garlic, Alcohol, and – Gulp - Veggies

  47. Do Children Play an Active or Passive Role in Perceptual Development? • Neonates perception is largely passive • Later, intentional action replaces capture • Systematic search replaces unsystematic • Attention becomes selective • Irrelevant information gets ignored

  48. What is the Evidence for the Roles of Nature and Nurture in Perceptual Development? • Sensory changes are linked to maturation of nervous system (Nature) • Experience also plays a role (Nurture) • Critical periods • Newborn kittens with patched eye – become blind in that eye • Nature and nurture interact to shape perceptual development.

  49. Lessons in Observation Sensation and Perception in Infancy • What does research tell us about the sensory capacities of newborns, such as Carter and Aiden?Cite evidence from the video that supports this research in regard to vision and hearing.

  50. Lessons in Observation Sensation and Perception in Infancy

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