Physical Development
Cognitive & Social Development
Social Learning
Classical Conditioning
Operant Conditioning
100

The coordination of larger actions such as standing and walking.

What are gross motor skills?

100

Interpreting our new experiences in terms of our existing schemas. 

What is assimilation? 

100

A mental representation of the layout of one's environment.

What is a cognitive map?

100

The stimulus that does not elicit a response prior to conditioning.

What is the neutral stimulus?

100

Increasing behaviors by stopping or reducing an aversive stimulus.

What is negative reinforcement?

200

This experiment indicated infant's ability to perceive depth and biological readiness to perceive spatial relationships.

What is the Visual Cliff Experiment?

200

In the Concrete Operational Stage, children gain the ability to undo a sequence of events back to its original starting point. 

What is reversibility?

200

The psychologist that developed the Social Learning Theory, we learn social behavior by observing and imitating others. 

Who is Albert Bandura? 

200

Any response that always and natural occurs at the presentation of the Unconditioned Stimulus

What is an unconditioned response?

200

Decreasing a behavior by administering an aversive stimulus.

What is positive punishment?

300

How social, emotional, and cognition influences the overall health and length of an individual's life.

What is longevity?

300

In the Preoperational stage, children gain the ability to understand that others have different beliefs, wishes, emotions and perceptions that influence their behavior.

What is theory of mind?

300

The results of this experiment concluded that the group of children who witnessed the aggressive adult model were more likely to imitate the aggressive behavior than children who did not. 

What is the Bobo Doll Experiment?

300

No longer responding (CR) to the original stimulus (CS)

What is extinction?

300

Schedule of reinforcement where a stimulus will occur at any time randomly within a set time limit.

What is variable-interval?

400

A thematic issue of developmental psychology that questions if development is gradual or does it proceed in distinct stages.

What is Continuity and Discontinuity?

400

Erikson's first stage that begins in infancy where if needs are dependably met, infants develop a sense of basic trust in their caregiver. 

What is trust v. mistrust?

400

Occurs when organisms learn that they have no control over their experience of aversive consequences in a given situation.

What is learned helplessness 

400

Organisms grow accustomed to and exhibit a diminished response to a repeated or enduring stimulus. 

What is habituation?
400

A stimulus that gains its reinforcing power through its association with a primary reinforcer. Ex.) money

What is a secondary reinforcer?

500

During adolescence, the brain eliminates unnecessary synaptic connections & focuses on improving stronger connections.

What is neural pruning?

500
In James Marcia's theory of identity, in this stage an individual has not yet fully developed a sense of identity or purpose. There is no exploration or commitment. 

What is identity diffusion?

500

When information is learned without reinforcement but it is not immediately evident. 

What is latent learning?

500

Animals are predisposed to learn stimulus-response pairings. 

What is biological preparedness?

500

A schedule of reinforcement where a stimulus will happen at random during a set number of occurrences. 

What is Variable-ratio?

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