Terminology - Ch. 1
Newborn - Ch. 3
Infant - Ch. 5
Child - Ch. 7
Adolescent - Ch. 11-12
100

This is a simple form of conditioning that pairs two stimuli together, so that both cause the same response. 

Example: Pavlov's dog experiment.

What is classical conditioning.

100

This is a test that evaluates a newborn's appearance, pulse, grimace, activity and respiratory health.

What is APGAR?

100

This is the first stage of cognitive development (according to Piaget), where infants learn to experience the world through their senses.

What is sensorimotor stage?

100

DAILY DOUBLE

These skills use the large muscles in the body (e.g. crawling, walking, lifting).

What are gross motor skills?

100

One of the 4 identity statuses of J. Marcia: 

This is when a teen makes commitments without thinking through alternatives, or makes commitments to meet parents' expectations.

What is foreclosure?

200

This is a type of reinforcer that makes a target behavior increase.

What is a positive reinforcer?

200

This is a unlearned, automatic response to a stimulus.

What is a reflex?

200

This describes infants' ability to recognize that an object still exists when it's out of sight.

What is object permanence?

200

This term describes the brain's tendency to use other parts of the brain to compensate for injured parts.

What is plasticity?

200

ONE OF MARCIA'S 4 IDENTITY STATUSES:

This is where a teen makes no commitments and is not interested in exploring alternatives.

What is identity diffusion?

300

This happens when a child encounters something new, but puts it in the wrong mental category (part of Piaget's theory).

E.g. young children who see a cat for the first time might call it "dog."

What is accommodation?

300

This is the hormone that stimulates labor contractions (and also promotes bonding after the baby is born).

What is oxytocin?

300
Loss of ability to understand or produce language.

What is aphasia?

300

This is the idea that properties of substances (weight or mass) stay the same even when the shape changes.

E.g. 500mL of water is the same amount in a short wide glass as it is in a tall thin glass.

What is conservation?

300

This last stage of cognitive development (according to Piaget) occurs in late childhood or adolescence. It includes the ability to think about abstract concepts, theories, what-if thinking, and flexible thinking.

What is formal operations?

400

This term describes the situation where a child can perform a task with a little bit of help, but cannot do it on his/her own yet.

What is zone of proximal development (ZPD)?
400

This term describes a baby that is born earlier than 37 weeks of pregnancy.

What is preterm (or premature)?

400

This describes the number of words that a child can use in spoken language.

What is expressive vocabulary?

400

This is when a child puts himself at the center of things and is unable to take other perspectives on the world.

What is egocentrism?

400
Happens during adolescence; the belief that others are constantly watching and thinking about our behaviors. It is an aspect of adolescent egocentrism.

What is imaginary audience?

500

This is a perspective in which psychologists view human development as a life-long process.

What is life-span perspective?

500

This is a condition that some mothers experience after childbirth. Symptoms: serious sadness, feeling hopeless, mood swings, trouble sleeping, loss of appetite.

What is "baby blues" or postpartum depression?

500

This describes the number of words that a child can understand.

What is receptive vocabulary?

500

A term that describes when children believe inanimate objects (rocks, toys) are alive.

What is animism?

500

A sense of belonging to an ethnic group.

What is ethnic identity?