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Human Growth and Development: Physical Development

Human Growth and Development: Physical Development. From WOMB to TOMB. Understanding Human Development. Development – Continuity and change in human capabilities over a lifespan. Physical Cognitive Social Emotional. Research Methods: Development. Cross Sectional

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Human Growth and Development: Physical Development

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  1. Human Growth and Development: Physical Development From WOMB to TOMB

  2. Understanding Human Development • Development – Continuity and change in human capabilities over a lifespan. • Physical • Cognitive • Social • Emotional

  3. Research Methods: Development • Cross Sectional • Study people of different ages at the same point in time • Advantages • Inexpensive • Can be completed quickly • Low attrition • Disadvantages • Different age groups are not necessarily much alike • Differences may be due to cohort differences rather than age

  4. Research Methods: Development • Longitudinal • Study the same group of people over time • Advantages • Detailed information about subjects • Developmental changes can be studied in detail • Eliminates cohort differences • Disadvantages • Expensive and time consuming • Potential for high attrition • Differences over time may be due to assessment tools and not age

  5. Research Methods: Development • Biographical or Retrospective Study • Participant’s past is reconstructed through interviews and other research about their life • Advantages • Great detail about life of individual • In-depth study of one person • Disadvantages • Recall of individual may not be accurate • Can be expensive and time consuming

  6. Issues in Developmental Psychology

  7. Nature vs. Nurture • Nature – Biological Instincts, Genes, Inheritance • Genotypes • Nurture – Social and Environmental Experiences • Phenotypes • Can we develop beyond our genetics and environment? • Seeking experiences – some do it better…. • Hug them, ignore them, read to them… • Does parenting matter? (Scarr, Harris) • How will you parent?

  8. Do early or later life experiences matter more? • Can the first year of life determine your entire future? • Some say without nurturing you can’t reach full potential • Others say power of later cognitive development is more important • Resilience – person’s ability to recover or adapt to difficult times • When does the ability to face adversity occur? • It is important because it is a major factor in determining capable adults

  9. Prenatal Development The Course of Prenatal Development: How, over time, did we come to be who we are? From zygote to birth, development progresses in an orderly, though fragile, sequence.

  10. Conception A single sperm cell (male) penetrates the outer coating of the egg (female) and fuses to form one fertilized cell. Your most fortunate of moments! Out of the 200 million sperm and 5000 eggs ‘you’ won the race.

  11. Embryo at 40 Days Embryo at 45 Days The Course of Prenatal Development • Germinal Period – Conception week 2 • Zygote, made up of 100-150 cells • Embryonic Period – Weeks 3-8 • Organs began to appear • Neural Tube in 3rd Week (Spinal Cord) • By end of period -> Heart Beat, Arms and Legs, Intestines, Face • Fetal Period – Months 2-9 • From Kidney bean to baby

  12. Prenatal Development • Placenta • Connects fetus to mother • Brings oxygen and nutrients • Takes away waste • Critical period • A time during development when influences have major effect • Teratogens • Substances that can damage an embryo or fetus • Preterm • STI Exposures • Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders

  13. Embryo at 40 Days Embryo at 45 Days Prenatal Development • A zygote is a fertilized cell with cells that become increasingly diverse. • At about 14 days the zygote turns into an embryo (a and b). Zygote

  14. Embryo at approximately 7 weeks: Eyes, fingers, toes and most internal organs have formed, but are not yet fully functional. The child has its own blood type, distinct from the mother's. Own muscle Movements • 8 weeks – • The unborn child, called a fetus at this stage, is about half an inch long. • The tiny baby is protected by the amniotic sac, filled with fluid. • Inside, the child swims and moves gracefully. • The arms and legs have lengthened, and fingers can be seen. • The toes will develop in the next few days. • Brain waves can now be measured. • 10 Weeks – Heart Fully Developed, Baby Teeth, blood oxygenated by placenta • 12- 16 weeks Vocal chords are complete, and the child can and does sometimes cry silently. • The brain is fully formed, and the child can feel pain. • The fetus may even suck his thumb. • The eyelids now cover the eyes, and will remain shut until the seventh month to protect the delicate optical nerve fibers. • Notice head size and chest size in comparison to an adult. • Muscles lengthen and become organized. • The mother will soon start feeling the first flutters of the unborn child kicking and moving within. • The fetus has an adult's taste buds and may be able to savor the mother's meals. • Foods the mother eats can affect movement of the baby

  15. 20 weeks – • The child can hear and recognize her mother's voice. • Though still small and fragile, the baby is growing rapidly and could possibly survive if born at this stage. • Fingernails and fingerprints appear. • Sex organs are visible. • Using an ultrasound device, the doctor can tell if the child is a girl or a boy. This is a a baby girl.

  16. 5 months old • Beginning to form hair on all body parts • Definite sleep/awake cycles now. • REM sleep occurs. • Approximately 8-10 inches long and 1 to 2 pounds • Body position is often still “head up” • Baby is viable at this point with at least a 50/50 chance of survival outside the womb.

  17. 30 weeks – • For several months, the umbilical cord has been the baby's lifeline to the mother. • Nourishment is transferred from the mother's blood, through the placenta, and into the umbilical cord to the fetus. • If the mother ingests any toxic substances, such as drugs or alcohol, the baby receives these as well.

  18. 7 months. • Room is getting tight at this point. • The baby is less able to move, squirms and pushes more than flutters and kicks. • Most babies begins to get into a head down position getting ready for birth.

  19. 32 weeks – • The fetus sleeps 90-95% of the day with REM sleep dominating the sleep cycle, an indication of dreaming. • The baby is very viable at this point, with a 75% or higher chance of survival. • If the baby is born, the concerns are with adequate lung development. Final lung development does not occur until about 37 weeks.

  20. Birth at 38-42 weeks • 40 weeks is normal gestation • The baby weighs on average 7 lbs. and is 20 inches long. • At birth the baby can see, hear, move and recognizes the voices of her parents or others who have been near the mother. Click the woman in labor to watch a birthing video. Please be aware that it is graphic….beautiful but can be difficult to watch.

  21. Human Development Childhood Physical Development

  22. Developing Brain • The developing brain overproduces neurons. Peaking around 28 billion at 7 months, these neurons are pruned to 23 billion at birth. The greatest neuronal spurt is in the frontal lobe enabling the individual to think rationally. • The development of the brain unfolds based on genetic instructions, causing various bodily and mental functions to occur in sequence— standing before walking, babbling before talking—this is called maturation. • Maturation sets the basic course of development, while experience adjusts it.

  23. Maturation • Physical growth, regardless of the environment. • Although the timing of our growth may be different, the sequence is almost always the same. • Children grow about 10 inches and gain about 15 pounds in first year • Growth occurs in spurts, as much as 1 inch overnight • Growth slows during second year Click to see movie of Captain Marvel and his maturation.

  24. Maturation and Infant Memory The earliest age of conscious memory is around 3½ years (Bauer, 2002). A 5-year-old has a sense of self and an increased long-term memory, thus organization of memory is different from 3-4 years.

  25. Reflexes • Sucking • Newborn’s tendency to suck on objects placed in the mouth • Swallowing • Enables newborn babies to swallow liquids without choking • Stepping • Stepping motions made by an infant when held upright Click Me

  26. Motor Development • Developmental Norms • Ages by which an average child achieves various developmental milestones • First, infants begin to roll over. Next, they sit unsupported, crawl, and finally walk. • Experience has little effect on this sequence.

  27. Perceptual Abilities • Difficult for psychologists as babies cannot talk. • Vision • Clear for 8-10 inches • Good vision by 6 months • Depth perception • Visual cliff research • Other senses • Ears are functional prior to birth • Infants particularly tune in to human voices • Taste and smell are fully functional • Sticky Mittens – Quicker Manipulation Click Me

  28. Human Development Adolescent Physical Development Click The Cartoon for an old school view on puberty

  29. Puberty • The period of sexual maturation, during which a person becomes capable of reproducing.

  30. Primary Sex Characteristics • Testosterone (Androgen) – Male sex hormone responsible for developments in genitals, height, voice change • Estradiol (Estrogen) – Female sex hormone responsible for breat and hip growth, uterine, skeletal development • Menarche for girls. • First ejaculation for boys.

  31. Secondary Sexual Characteristics • Non-reproductive sexual characteristics. Body Hair Widening of the Hips Deeper Voice Breast Development

  32. The Brain • Physical Change Connected to Socioemotional Development • Amygdala (Emotion) and Prefrontal Cortex (reasoning and decision making) are offset • Strong emotional responses without the proper control of these passions. • Environment linked to bio development

  33. Human Development Adulthood and Physical Development

  34. Adulthood • All physical abilities essentially peak by our mid twenties. • Then is all goes downhill.

  35. Physical Milestones • Menopause in woman • Estrogen Decline • Decline in speed and strength • Skin wrinkles and sags • Decrease in height • Perception Loss • Hearing starts at 18!

  36. Theories of Aging • Free Radical – Unstable oxygen molecules produce inside of cells. Damage DNA • Hormonal Stress – As hormonal system ages our ability to resist stress and disease is diminished • Cellular Clock – Cells ability to divide lessens as we age

  37. Life Expectancy • Life Expectancy keeps increasing- now about 75. • Women outlive men by about 4 years. • But more men are conceived 126 to 100. Then 105 to 100 by birth. In other words, men die easier. • Okinawan's live longer than everyone else… Why?

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