Biological
Cognitive
Parent-Child
Context
Transitions
100

This brain region takes the longest to develop and is most associated with the regulation of emotions, behavior, and activation of other brain regions in response to stress

PRE-FRONTAL CORTEX

100

The specific term for the combination of these four components: inhibitory control, working memory, cognitive flexibility, planning

EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONING

100

The attachment style characterization when the child is upset when the parent leaves them alone in a strange place, but then easily comforted upon the parent’s return.

SECURE

100

This is the characterization of the type of stress present when you get nervous before a big test, but the challenge helps you stay focused and perform well.

POSITIVE STRESS

100

This period of development has been identified as a sensitive period for identity development

ADOLESCENCE

200

This “layer above” is characterized by context-driven changes to gene expression, rather than changes to DNA itself

EPIGENETICS

200

Performance on this tasty self-regulation task is both an indicator of later success in life AND changes depending on how reliable the experimenter is

MARSHMALLOW TASK

200

The key element of developing attachment security, characterized by a caregiver responding appropriately and promptly to the child’s needs (although the specifics of what this looks like will vary widely).

SENSITIVITY

200

This is defined as the capacity of a dynamic system to adapt successfully through multisystem processes to challenges that threaten the function, survival, or development of the system (it helps us manage stress)

RESILIENCE

200

This is grown by the human embryo (therefore sharing the embryo’s DNA) to enable provision of the nutrients needed to come to full term (by digging into the pregnant person’s uterus), and is responded to by the pregnant person’s body as an intruder

PLACENTA

300

The ability of the brain to reorganize synaptic connections, heightened in different regions of the brain at different times of development

NEUROPLASTICITY

300

The two main psychological factors that influence biological stress activation

CONTROL AND PREDICTABILITY

300

The parenting style characterization when a parent sets clear, strict rules and also provides emotional support.

AUTHORITATIVE

300

This is the sociometric status that shy kids most often fall info

NEGLECTED

300

These are the original two dimensions of identity development, as outlined by Erikson’s and Marcia’s theoretical models

EXPLORATION AND COMMITMENT

400

This hormone regulates activity of the HPA axis, promotes positive social interaction, and is used in the treatment of depression

OXYTOCIN

400

The age at which children start demonstrating that they notice racial differences (i.e., looking more at faces that match the race of their caregivers)

3 MONTHS

400

Also known as “skin-to-skin,” this very early parenting behavior is associated with child respiratory health, child glucose stability, parent confidence, and longer breastfeeding times.

KANGAROO CARE

400

This is both a central principle of developmental psychopathology and also of Bronfenbrenner’s BioEcological Theory

MULTIPLE LEVELS

400

This is a psychological phenomenon/emotion that exists as a chronic stressor, being related to cognitive decline in old age and more deadly than smoking cigarettes

LONELINESS

500

This brain region is most associated with dopamine production and most important for sensitivity to reward

STRIATUM

500

In the sticky mittens study, infants learned through interactions that blocks could be used for multiple functions, including: being picked up, being moved or dropped, and being put in the mouth. This is the term for these functions.

AFFORDANCES

500

The name of the assessment commonly used to characterize attachment style

STRANGE SITUATION

500

The term for spontaneous rhythmic coordination of actions, emotions, thoughts, and physiological processes across time between two or more individuals (i.e., caregiver and child)

SYNCHRONY

500

These are the three key components of the psychological construct of critical consciousness

REFLECTION, MOTIVATION & ACTION

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