The point in life when development ends.
What is death?
In the sensorimotor stage, Piaget says we develop this -
What is object permanence?
The smallest distinctive unit of sound.
What is a phoneme?
Parenting type where they just want to be friends.
What is permissive parenting?
The main physical development in adolescence.
What is puberty?
The design method of following a cohort over a long period of time to learn about their development.
What is the longitudinal method?
This type of intelligence decreases as one ages.
What is fluid intelligence?
What is language?
The first stage in Erikson's psychosocial development.
What is trust v mistrust?
A woman goes through this and loses her reproductive ability.
What is menopause?
The thematic issue of interest looking at the difference in impact from the genes or environment of a person.
What is nature vs nurture?
People in this Piagetian stage gain the ability to think abstractly -
What is the formal operational stage?
The focus on the meaning of a sentence rather than what is right/wrong with it.
What is semantics?
The ecological system theory level that focuses on the relationships between groups in the microsystem.
What is the mesosystem?
These negatively influence the major physical and psychological milestones that occur during prenatal development.
What are teratogens?
The design method taking multiple cohorts at the same time.
What is a cross-sectional study?
This psychologist identified that we use a zone of proximal development while learning.
Who is Lev Vygotsky?
People using the same grammar rules in every situation even when it doesn't apply.
What is overgeneralization?
When children expressed heightened fear when away from their caregiver or in the presence of a stranger.
What is separation anxiety?
This demonstrates an early ability in infants to perceive depth and is an innovative way to assess infant responses.
What is the visual cliff?
The thematic issue of interest with gradual change over time versus abrupt transitions.
What is continuity v discontinuity?
What is scaffolding?
The four stages of language development (in order first to last)
What is cooing, babbling, one-word, telegraphic?
The expanded name of ACEs.
What are adverse childhood experiences?
The two different types of motor coordination.
What are fine and gross?