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1. Prepared by Madeleine Lacefield Tattoon, M.A. 1 Part II The First Two Years: Infant and Toddlers
2. 2
3. 3 By contrast, if you cared for newborn 24 hours a day for a month, went away for two years, and then came back,you might not recognized him or her, because the baby would have quadrupled in weight, grown taller by more than a foot, and sprouted a new head of hair.
Behavior would have changed, too. Not much crying, but some laughter and fearincluding of you.
4. 4 A year or two is not much compared with the 75 or so years of the average life span. However, in two years newborns reach half their adult height, talk in sentences, and express almost every emotionnot just joy and fear but also love, jealousy, and shame.
5. 5
6. 6 Body Changes In infancy
growth is fast
neglect can be severe
gain needs to be monitored
health check-up need to include
height, weight and head circumference
7. 7 Body Size rapid growth
infants typically double their birth weight by the 4th month and triple by the 1st birthday
physical growth slows in the 2nd year
by 24 months weight is about 30 lbs, height about 32-36
these numbers are norms (average)
8. 8 Body Size norms
an average or standard for a particular population
particular population
a representative sample of North American infants
percentiles
a number that is midway between 0 and 100, 50th percentile = with the children above it and below it
9. 9 Body Size Weight increase in the early months is fat, providing insulation for warmth and nourishment
Nourishment keeps the brain growing, if teething or illness interfere with eating
When nutrition is temporarily inadequate, the body stops growing but not the brain
this is known as a phenomenon called head-sparing
10. 10 Sleep Infants sleep about 17 hours or more a day
Regular and ample sleep correlates with normal brain maturation, learning, emotional regulation, and psychological adjustment in school and within the family
11. 11 Sleep Over the first month the amount of time spent in each type or stage of sleep changes
Newborns dream a lot, or at least they have a high proportion of REM sleep
REM sleep
rapid eye movement sleep is a stage of sleep characterized by flickering eyes behind closed lids, dreaming, and rapid brain waves
3 months patterns of alertness and sleep
3 to 4 months slow wave sleep increases
12. 12 Sleep Sleep Patterns can be
affected by birth order
first born typically receive more attention
diet
parents might respond to predawn cries with food, and/or play (babies learn to wake up night after night)
child-rearing practices
Where should infants sleep?
co-sleeping or bed-sharing
brain maturation
13. 13 Who Sleeps Where?
14. 14 Brain Development the newborns skull is disproportionately large
large enough to hold the brain, which at birth is 25% of the adult brain
the neonates body is typically 5% of the adult weight
by age 2 the brain is almost 75% of the adult brain weight
the childs total body weight is only about 20% of its adult weight
15. 15 Connection in the Brain Head circumference provides a rough idea of how the brain is growing, and that is why medical checkups include measurement of the skull.
Head typically increases about 35% within the 1st year
16. 16 Basic Brain Structures The brains communication system begins with nerve cells, called neurons.
Neurons are one of the billions of nerve cells in the central nervous system, especially the brain.
Infants have billions of neutrons
Located in the brain or in the brain stem
the region that controls automatic responses, I.e., heartbeat, breathing, temperature, and arousal
70% of the neurons are in the cortex
17. 17 Basic Brain Structures The cortex is crucial for humans
80% of the human brain materials in the cortex
in other mammals the cortex is proportionally smaller, and non-mammals have no cortex
most thinking, feeling, and sensing take place in the cortex, although other parts of the brain join in.
18. 18 Basic Brain Structures Areas of the cortex specialize in particular functions:
Visual
auditory
an area dedicated to the sense of touch for each body part
regional specialization within the cortex occurs not only for motor skills and senses but also for aspects of cognition
19. 6 months recognize mother/fathers face
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20. 20 Basic Brain Structures Between brain areas, neurons are connected to other neurons by intricate networks of nerve fibers called axons and dendrites
a neuron has a single axon and numerous dendrites, which spread out like the branches of a tree
axons and neurons meet the dendrites of other neurons at intersections called synapses which are critical communication links within the brain
21. 21 Basic Brain Structures
22. 22 Basic Brain Structures Transient Exuberance and Pruning
The fivefold increase in dendrites in the cortex occurs in the 24 months after birth, with about 100 trillion synapses being present at age 2
The expanded growth is followed by pruning in which unused neurons and misconnected dendrites atrophy and die
Synapses, dendrites, and even neurons continue to form and die throughout life, though more rapidly in infancy than at any other time
23. 23 Basic Brain Structures Experience Shapes the Brain
brain structure and growth depends on genes and experiences
experiences produce postnatal rise and fall
some dendrites wither away because they are underused; no experiences have caused them to send a message to the axons of other neurons.
increasing cognitive complexity of childhood is related to a loss of synapses
Issue with Fragile X syndrome
24. 24 Basic Brain Structures Stress and the Brain
example of the role of experience in brain development begins when the brain produces cortisol and other hormones in response to stress, which happen throughout life
25. 25 Basic Brain Structures Necessary and Possible Experiences
Scientist William Greenough identified two experience-related aspects of brain development
The development of experience-expectant referring to brain functions that require certain basic common experiences, which an infant can be expected to have in order to develop normally
The development of experience-dependent referring to brain functions that depend on particular, variable experience and that therefore may or may not develop in a particular infant
26. 26 Basic Brain Structures Necessary and Possible Experiences
Basic, common experiences must happen for normal brain maturation to occur, and they almost always do happen
The brain is designed to expect them and use them for growth
in contrast, dependent experiences might happen. Because of them, one brain differs from another
experience varies; language babies hear or how their mothers reacts to frustration
all people are similar, but each person is unique, because of early experiences
27. 27 Basic Brain Structures Necessary and Possible Experiences
The last part of the brain to mature is the prefrontal cortex
The area for anticipation, planning, and impulse control
Virtually inactive in early infancy
telling an infant to stop crying is pointless
shaking a baby to stop crying, shaken baby syndrome, is useless
Gradually becomes more efficient over the years of childhood and adolescence
28. 28 Basic Brain Structures Implications for Caregivers
Early brain growth is rapid and reflects experience
caressing a newborn,
talking to a preverbal infant
showing affection toward a small person
are essential to develop that persons full potential
29. 29 Basic Brain Structures Implications for Caregivers
Each part of the brain has sequence of
growing
connecting
pruning
Stimulations are meaningless before the brain is ready
advisable to follow the babys lead
infants respond most strongly and positively to their brains need
Self-righting is the inborn drive to remedy a developmental deficit
30. 30 Basic Brain Structures Implications for Caregivers
the human brain is designed to grow and adapt
some plasticity is retained throughout life
the brain protects itself from overstimulation
ex., overstimulated babies cry or sleep
babies adjust to understimulation
by developing new connections lifelong
Sensitive period
31. 31 Basic Brain Structures Implications for Caregivers
Neuroscientist once thought that brains were influenced by
Genes and prenatal influences
By contrast, social scientist by
Childhood environment was crucial
Cultures
Societies
Parents
credited or blamed for childs emotions and/or actions
32. 32 Basic Brain Structures THINK LIKE A SCIENTIST
Plasticity and Orphans
33. 33 Senses and Motor Skills Piaget called the first period of intelligence the
Sensorimotor stage
cognition develops from the senses and motor skills
infant brain development depends on sensory experiences and early movement
within hours of birth vital organs are functioning, assessing basic senses and motor responses (Brazelton Neonatal Assessment Scale; measures 26 items of newborn behavior)
34. 34 Sensation and Perception All the senses function at birth
open eyes, sensitive ears, and responsive noses, tongues, and skin
Very young babies attend to everything
Infants dont focus on anything in particular
To about age one taste in the primary way humans learn about objects
35. 35 Sensation and Perception Sensation is the response of a sensory system
eyes, ears, skin, tongue, nose
when it detects a stimulus
when the inner ear reverberates with sound
The retina and pupil of the eye intercept light
36. 36 Sensation and Perception Perception is the mental processing of sensory information
the brain notices and processes a sensation
when the brain interprets a sensation
Infants brains are attuned to experiences that are repeated, striving to make sense of them
37. 37 Senses and Motor Skills Hearing
Hearing is acute at birth
Certain sounds trigger reflexes
Sudden noises startle newborns
Rhythmic sounds soothe them and put them to sleep
The first days of life infants turn their heads towards sound
They soon connect sight and sound with accuracy
38. 38 Senses and Motor Skills Seeing
At birth vision is the least mature
The infant eyes are sensitive to bright light even though the eyes open in mid-pregnancy
Newborns are legally blind they can only see objects 4 30 away
39. 39 Senses and Motor Skills Seeing
At two months infants look more intensely at faces and often smile
At three months infants look more closely at the eyes and mouth
The ability to focus the two eyes in a coordinated manner in order to see one image is known as binocular vision (@14 months)
40. 40 Senses and Motor Skills Tasting, Smelling and Touching
41. 41 Senses and Motor Skills Tasting, Smelling and Touching
At birth the senses of taste, smell and touch function and rapidly adapt to the social world
As infants learn their caregivers smell and touch (handling) they relax and cuddle
Over time infants become responsive to whose touch it is and what it communicates
42. 42 Senses and Motor Skills Early sensation seems to have two goals:
Social interaction
To respond to familiar caregivers
Comfort
To be soothed amid the disturbances of infant life
43. 43 Senses and Motor Skills Motor Skill is the learned ability to move some part of the body, from a large leap to a flicker of the eyelid.
(motor refers to movement of muscles; the abilities needed to move and control the body)
44. 44 Senses and Motor Skills Reflexes are a responsive movement that seems automatic because it almost always occurs in reaction to a particular stimulus. Newborns have many reflexes, some of which disappear with maturation (a reflex is an involuntary response to a particular stimulus
45. 45 Senses and Motor Skills Reflexes
Infants have dozen of reflexes
three sets are critical for survival
that maintain oxygen supply
that maintain constant body temperature
that manage feeding
46. 46 Senses and Motor Skills Gross Motor Skills are physical abilities involving large body movements (gross meaning big)
walking
jumping
Walking progress
from reflexive,
to hesitant
to adult-supported stepping
to a smooth coordinated gait
47. 47 Senses and Motor Skills Gross Motor Skills
Three factors combine to allow toddlers to walk
muscle strength
brain maturation within the motor cortex
practices
48. 48 Senses and Motor Skills Fine Motor Skills are physical abilities involving small body movements, especially of the hands and fingers (fine in this text means small)
drawing
picking up a coin
49. 49 Senses and Motor Skills Ethnic Variation
healthy infants develop skills in the same sequence
they vary in the age at which they acquire them (the table on the next slide show some norms)
Walking, when grouped by ethnicity:
Generally African American are ahead of Hispanic Americans
Hispanic American are ahead of European American
Internationally the earliest walkers are in Uganda
The latest walkers are in France
50. 50 Senses and Motor Skills
51. 51 Senses and Motor Skills Genes are only a small part of most ethnic differences
Cultural patterns of child rearing can affect sensation, perception, and motor skills
52. 52 Public Health Measures 8 billion children were born between 1950 2005
2 billion died before age 5
Deaths could be twice this if not for:
Child care
Preventive care immunization
Clean water
Adequate nutrition
Medial treatment, etc. Oral rehydration therapy
53. 53 Public Health Measures Immunization is a process that stimulates the bodys immune system to defend against attack by a particular contagious disease (immunization acquired either naturally, by having the disease or though vaccination)
immunization successes
Smallpox
Polio
Measles
problem with immunization
parents dont notice if their children does not get seriously ill
minor disease can kill
parents are concern about side effects of vaccinations
54. 54 Public Health Measures Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
die unexpectedly in their sleep
No apparent cause of death
1990 in the U.S., 5000 babies died of SIDS, 1 in 800
55. 55 ISSUES AND APPLICATONS Back to Sleep
56. 56 Nutrition has been discuss indirectly throughout the chapter
Breast is Best
Good nutrition starts with mothers milk
Colostrum, a thick, high-calorie fluid secreted by the womans breast at the birth of a child.
About 3 days later the breast begins to produce milk
Breast fed babies are less likely to get sick
57. 57 Nutrition Malnutrition
protein-calorie malnutrition is a condition in which a person does not consume sufficient food of any kind
the deprivation can result in several illnesses, severe weight loss, and sometimes death
to measure a childs nutritional status, compare weight and height with the "norms"
58. Kwashiorkor
marasmus 58