Trust vs mistrust: What stage is this?
Infancy
What is object permanence?
What stage?
The awareness that things continue to exist even when not perceived.
Sensorimotor
What is the correct order?
A- embryo, zygote, fetus
B- fetus, embryo, zygote
C- zygote, embryo, fetus
C- zygote, embryo, fetus
follows laws +rules, conformity, can see view of others
What stage of morality is this?
Conventional Morality
What is Alzheimer disease?
A progressive and irreversible brain disorder characterized by gradual deterioration of memory, reasoning, language, and physical functioning.
Initiative vs Guilt: What stage is this?
Preschooler
What stage includes abstract logic and potential for mature moral reasoning?
Formal operational stage
What stage does the heart begin to beat?
Embryo
In what level of morality do we develop individual ethics, basic rights, and realize that some issues are bigger than the law?
Post Conventional
What is it called when a baby has a tendency that when touched on the cheek they turn toward the touch and open the mouth in search of the nipple?
Rooting reflex
Toddlerhood: toddlers learn to exercise their will and do things for themselves or they doubt their abilities. What two issues go along with this stage?
Initiative vs. Guilt
What Piaget stage includes: pretend play, egocentrism, language development?
Preoperational
How many weeks after conception is it considered a fetus?
9 weeks
At what level of morality do most children obey to avoid punishment or gain a reward?
Preconventional
Define habituation.
Decreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation; becoming used to a certain stimuli.
Define intimacy.
What stage is this?
The ability to form close loving relationships
Young adulthood stage
What is conservation?
What stage?
The principle that properties such as a mass volume and number remain the same despite changes in the forms of objects.
Concrete operational
What causes physical and cognitive abnormalities in children caused by a pregnant woman's heavy drinking?
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
What is included in an authoritative parenting style?
Parents are both demanding and responsive; they explain and allow exceptions to the rules and encourage open discussion.
What is the difference between assimilation and accommodation?
Assimilation- interpreting one's new experience in terms of one's existing schemas.
Accommodation- adapting ones current schemas to incorporate new information.
Define Identity.
What stage is this in?
Ones sense of self; to solidify a sense of self by testing and integrating various roles
Adolescence stage
What is egocentrism?
What are teratogens?
Agents, such as chemicals and viruses that can reach the embryo or fetus during prenatal development and cause harm.
Define the authoritarian parenting style.
Parents impose rules and expect obedience with no exceptions.
when development proceeds from the center of the body outwards; torso grows first, then limbs.