the three levels of consciousness
father of the psychosocial theory
erik erikson
the ability to absorb new information into existing schemas
assimilation
stage involving punishment/obedience orientation and instrumental relativist orientation
preconventional thinking
measures the five essential categories of functioning 1 and 5 minutes after birth (colour, reflex irritability, heart rate, respiratory rate, and muscle tone)
Apgar score
the three functional components of the mind
id, ego, superego
first stage of psychosocial development
trust vs. mistrust
the three major cognitive concepts
schema, assimilation, accommodation
father of the stages of moral development
lawrence kohlberg
the link between the fetus and the placenta
umbilical cord
when does the latency stage occur?
school age (6-12 years old)
what stage of psychosocial development are young adults in?
intimacy vs. isolation
what cognitive stage are 0-2 year olds in?
sensorimotor
stage involving interpersonal concordance orientation and law and order orientation
conventional thinking
waxy white substance found coating the skin of newborn human babies
vernix caseosa
channelling unacceptable impulses into socially acceptable outlets
sublimation
the will to be independent and to explore one's world
autonomy
understanding that an object or person still exists when you can't see them
object permanence
stage involving social contract legalistic orientation and universal ethical principle orientation
postconventional thinking
the three stages of labour
dilation of the cervix, delivery of the baby, afterbirth
the instinctive drive to seek pleasure; it serves as the animating force of the id
pleasure principle or libido
success in looking back on life and feeling fulfilled
ego integrity
believing that inanimate objects have feelings
animistic thinking
true or false: not all older adults reach a stage where they are guided by their own developed moral conscience
true
how many weeks in do ossification centres develop?