Language
Attachment
Emotion
Play
Wild Card
100

What is infant directed speech?

speech used to talk to infants that is usually higher pitch, shorter sentences and more pauses

100

What are Bowlby's stages of attachment? (hint: there are four)

Preattachment phase 

-0-2 months 

-Innate signals +parental responsiveness 

Attachment in the making

-6-8 months

-Recognition of and preferential responding to caregivers 

Clear cut attachment

-Up to 2 years 

-Active seeking, separation distress

Reciprocal relationships

-Age 2 onwards

-Children as relationship partners

100

What is Basic Emotion Theory?

Emotions are innate, universal and easily recognizable by stereotyped facial expressions

100

Why is play valuable?

Play:

Supports exploration and hypothesis testing

Is cognitively demanding

Is fun and positive emotions help kids learn

Promotes meaningful socially interactive learning 

Enables exchange of high quality language

100

What is Theory of Constructed Emotion?

Emotions are our brain’s interpretation of how we are feeling, based on its past experience and knowledge

200

What is word segmentation?

Discovering where words begin and end in fluent speech (begins after 6 mo.)

200

What is secure base attachment?

The presence of a trusted caregiver provides an infant or toddler with a sense of security that makes it possible for the child to explore the environment

200

What are self-conscious emotions?

Require that children have a sense of themselves as separate from other people; those affected by how we see ourselves and how we think others perceive us

Not fully developed until age 2

e.g. Guilt, shame, jealousy, pride, etc

200

What are the four types of play?

ChildxChild= Free play

ChildxAdult= Guided play 

AdultxChild= Co-opted play

AdultxAdult= Direct instruction

200

What is the whole object constraint? (language)

leads children to infer that terms refer to objects as a whole rather than to their parts, substance, color, or other properties

  • Look at the toma; relying too much on whole object

300

What's the difference between underextensions and overextensions?

Under: using a word in a more limited context than appropriate

-Believing that dog refers to only THEIR dog not any other one 

Over: using a word in a broader context than is appropriate

-Ball: ball, ballon, marble, apple, egg

-Snow: snow, white tail on horse, white flannel bed pad, white puddle of milk on floor

300

Provide a brief description of the four different types of parenting styles.

Authoritative

-Warm, involved, considers child’s opinions, set standard, firm, high expectations 

Authoritarian 

-Little warmth, does not consider, enforces rules, punitive discipline, “wild” child view

Permissive 

-Mod. warmth, glorifies free expression, no rules, ignores bad behavior, yields to coercion

Uninvolved

-Self centered, minimizes interactions w/ child, doesn’t monitor where the child is, needy

300

How do children independently emotionally regulate as they get older?

Over the first years of life, children decrease their use of self soothing (e.g. sucking on their thumb) and increase use of distraction (e.g. playing with a different toy)

300

How does direct instruction impact exploration and discovery?

Instruction approx 3.75 actions performed 

Baseline approx 6

Accidental approx 5.75

Children who weren't given instruction performed more actions that lead to spontaneous exploration and discovery

300

What are the three types of insecure attachment styles?

INSECURE AVOIDANT 

Caregivers don't respond to baby’s signals 

Not much physical contact 

Angry & irritable when together 

INSECURE RESISTANT 

Unaffectionate and inconsistent 

INSECURE DISORGANIZED

Neglect or physical abuse 

Depressed mothers

400

ERP study: If an infant is better at discriminating sounds in a non-native language, their vocabulary is lower. Why?

Better non-native discrimination means an infant is lagging behind for native vocabulary

Kids might not have figured out sound distributions to their own language which will affect vocabulary later on

400

Belsky et al (1996) assessed attachment security at 12 months and then at the age of 3, brought kids in for a memory task. How did securely attached kids perform compared to those who weren't?

Kids who were securely attached showed better memory for positive events.

Kids who were not secure showed better memory for negative events. 

**Encode stuff that’s positive or negative depending on what’s most common to you

400

For 7 months and beyond: fear is often displayed in response to...

Stranger anxiety (peak ~7-9 months)

Separation anxiety (peak ~15 months)

Nonsocial fears

400

How do electronic toys compare to traditional toys?

Electronic baby toys are associated with decreases in quality and quantity of language input to babies 

Fewer conversation turns 

Fewer adult words 

Fewer parental responses

400

How do electronic toys impact parents and autistic children's parent-child play time?

Parents & autistic children talk less and use less lexical diversity with electronic toys

Electronic toys take over the interactions between parents and children

500

Why do bilingual children (spanish and english) perform better in different gender trials compared to same gender trials?

In Spanish, all nouns have either masculine or feminine gender. 

La pelota vs. el zapato (they knew based on the la or el which to look at when asked to find la pelota)

Became harder when asked to find la pelota when there was la galleta vs. la pelota

500

How does SES affect parenting styles?

Not having enough money creates economic distress which can affect mood which can create conflict (marital) – leads to less involved parenting – leads to emotional insecurity – can gender antisocial or adjustment related problems 

Nature of parent jobs where the structures cause more obedience to authority (blue collar)

Extent that you don't have a lot of resources – you can't afford to safer places to live – parents living in less safe neighborhoods to safer ones show a change in parenting styles (less strict)

500

Two groups of children: (1) children who had been institutionalized, (2) children living with their biological families. Two tasks: emotion identification (identify photographs of facial expressions of emotion) & emotion understanding (match facial expressions to an emotional situation). How did previously institutionalized children perform?

Emotional identification: previously institutionalized children worse than controls for all emotions (e.g. happy, sad, fearful)

Emotion understanding: previously institutionalized children worse than controls for all emotions except anger where performance was equal

500

Overimitation: Are children more likely to imitate relevant (purposefully waving a paddle) or irrelevant actions (waving a paddle mindlessly while on the phone)?

Children are more likely to imitate relevant actions that were intentional compared to ones that were unintentional (irrelevant)

500

What is intermittent reinforcement? (textbook: play)

Inconsistent response to a behavior, like sometimes punishing certain behaviors and other times ignoring it

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