Prenatal Development
Infancy and Childhood: Physical and Cognitive Development
Infancy and Childhood: Social Development
Adolescence
Adulthood
100

The first stage of prenatal development. This is the fertilized egg. 

What is the zygote?

100

This skills involve the movement of smaller muscles, such as buttoning your shirt.

What are fine motor skills

100

An emotional tie with another person. This is shown in young children by their seeking closeness to the caregiver and showing distress on separation. 

What is attachment

100

The period of sexual maturation, during which a person becomes capable of reproducing. 

What is puberty? 

100

The culturally preferred timing of social events such as marriage, parenthood, and retirement. 

What is the social clock? 

200

Agents such as viruses and drugs can damage an embryo or fetus

What are teratogens? 

200

Touching the corner of an infant's mouth and they will turn their head in that direction.

What is the rooting reflex? 

200

The fear of stranger that infants commonly display beginning about 8 months of age

What is stranger anxiety?

200

A period from about age 18 to the mid-twenties, when many in Western cultures are no longer adolescents but have not yet achieved full independence as adults. 

What is Emerging Adulthood? 

200
This is a neurocognitive disorder marked by neural plaques, often with onset after age 80, and entailing a progressive decline in memory and other cognitive abilities. 

What is Alzheimer's disease? 

300

This results from a gene copying error that results in an extra copy of chromosome 21

What is down syndrome?

300

Adapting one's current understandings(schemas) to incorporate new information. 

What is accommodation? 

300

This was demonstrated by infants who displayed either a clinging, anxious attachment, or an avoidant attachment that resists closeness. 

What is insecure attachment? 

300

Lawrence Kohlberg proposed that during this stage, morality evolves to a more conventional level that cares for others and upholds laws. 

What is conventional morality? 

300
The phenomenon where older people tend to put off dying when there is an event to look forward to. 

What is the death-deferral phenomenon/theory

400

Decreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation. As infants gain familiarity with repeated exposure to a stimulus, their interest wanes and they look away sooner. 

What is Habituation?

400

Piaget proposed that during this stage, young infants lack object permanence. 

What is the sensorimotor stage? 

400

Erikson proposed that during this stage teens try to determine their identity and their direction in life. 

What is Adolescence? 

What is Identity v. Role Confusion? 
400

This person criticized Kohlberg's research for not accounting for differences in men and women. 

Who is Carol Gilligan?

400

Due to the wearing down of this, aging cells may die without being replaced with perfect genetic replicas. 

What are telomeres

500

About 10 days after conception, this stage completes as the zygote attaches to the mother's uterine wall. 

(Hint: During this stage, the cells inside the egg divide)

What is the germinal stage?

500

The space between what a child can and can't do with help.

(Hint: Lee Vygotsky came up with this theory as an alternate view of cognitive development!) 

What is the zone of proximal development

500

This parenting style is closely associated with the development of self-reliance and confidence. 


What is authoritative parenting? 

500

How we value ourselves. This often falls during early adolescence but rises in late teens and early 20s. 

What is self-esteem? 

500
During this stage of Death, a person may experience envy of others and project their emotions on the environment.

What is Stage 2

What is Anger?