The only people who share 100% of their genetics.
Classic psychology study used to measure delay of gratification.
What is the Marshmallow Task?
Known as a building block for personality development.
What is temperament?
Creator of the Ecological Systems model.
Who is Urie Bronfenbrenner?
The capacity to withstand or recover from challenges that threaten wellbeing.
What is resilience?
The name of the model that explains why adolescence is a period of increased risk-taking.
What is the dual systems model?
Term used to describe how infants transition from universal listeners to native listeners in their first year of life.
What is perceptual narrowing?
What is demandingness and responsiveness?
Term describing how media occupies time that could be spent on other activities, such as playing outside.
What is displacement?
Largest early intervention schooling program in the US for low-income families.
What is Head Start?
Behaviors, environments, and conditions that are potentially harmful to a developing organism.
What are teratogens?
Term that describes the social rules for using language (e.g., turn taking).
What is pragmatics?
Term that describes how early attachment relationships can influence later platonic and romantic relationships in adulthood.
What is internal working model?
Term for when a patient is diagnosed with two or more mental disorders simultaneously.
What is comorbidity?
Cumulative impact of chronic and acute stress due to experiences of racism and discrimination.
What is weathering?
The ideal position for a fetus during labor and delivery.
What is vertex position?
Theory that language influences cognitive development and how people understand the world.
What is the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis?
Jonah is a sophomore in college. Growing up, his parents always wanted him to become a surgeon. For the past two years, Jonah has predominately taken pre-med courses to prepare him for medical school after graduation. According to Marcia, Jonah best represents the _____ stage of identity formation.
What is foreclosure?
Cultural beliefs on the "right" and "wrong" ways to raise a child.
What are ethnotheories?
Paradigm that measures loss of interest after repeated exposure to a stimulus.
What is habituation?
Chemical that stimulates the onset of puberty.
What is kisspeptin?
The three main components of executive function (EF).
What is inhibitory control, cognitive flexibility, and working memory?
Name of the study paradigm used to measure infant social referencing.
What is the visual cliff?
Social status associated with children who are highly disliked by others because they are shy, fearful of others, and have low self-esteem.
What is rejected-withdrawn?
The name for the phenomenon in which infants cry in response to hearing other infants cry.
What is emotional contagion?