'Developmental psychology', also known as 'Human Development', is the
scientific study of progressive
psychological changes that occur in
human beings as they age. Originally concerned with
infants and
children, and later other periods of great change such as
adolescence and
aging, it now encompasses the entire life span. This field examines change across a broad range of topics including
motor skills and other psycho-physiological processes,
problem solving abilities, conceptual understanding, acquisition of
language,
moral understanding, and
identity formation.
Developmental psychologists investigate key questions, such as whether children are qualitatively different from adults or simply lack the experience that adults draw upon. Other issues that they deal with is the question of whether development occurs through the gradual accumulation of
knowledge or through shifts from one stage of
thinking to another; or if children are born with innate knowledge or figure things out through
experience; and whether development is driven by the
social context or by something inside each child.
Developmental psychology informs several applied fields, including:
educational psychology,
child psychopathology and developmental
forensics. Developmental psychology complements several other basic research fields in
psychology including
social psychology,
cognitive psychology,
cognitive development, and
comparative psychology.
Theory
Many theoretical perspectives attempt to explain development, among the most prominent are:
Jean Piaget Stage Theory,
Lev Vygotsky's
Social Contextualism (and its heir, the
Ecological Systems Theory of
Urie Bronfenbrenner), and especially the
information processing framework employed by cognitive psychology.
To a far lesser extent, historical theories continue to provide a basis for additional research, among them are
Erik Erikson's eight
stages of psychosocial development and
John B. Watson's and
B. F. Skinner's
Behaviorism. Many other theories are prominent for their contributions to particular aspects of development. For example,
Attachment theory describes kinds of interpersonal relationships and
Lawrence Kohlberg describes
stages in moral reasoning. Human Development is also an area of study in Education. One of the pioneers in defining the stages of human development was
Robert J. Havighurst. His major contribution was defining the developmental tasks for six basic age groups.
Ecological Systems Theory
Generally regarded as one of the world's leading scholars in the field of developmental psychology, Bronfenbrenner's primary contribution was his
Ecological Systems Theory, in which he delineated four types of nested systems, with bi-directional influences within and between systems.
#Microsystem: Immediate environments (
family,
school,
peer group,
neighborhood, and
childcare environments)
#Mesosystem: A system comprised of connections between immediate environments (i.e., a child’s home and school)
#Exosystem: External environmental settings which only indirectly affect development (such as parent's workplace)
#Macrosystem: The larger
cultural context (
Eastern vs.
Western culture, national economy, political culture,
subculture)
Each system contains factors that can powerfully shape development, as can the interaction of factors across systems.
The major statement of this theory, ''The Ecology of Human Development'' (1979) has had widespread influence on the way psychologists and others approach the study of human beings and their environments. As a result of Bronfenbrenner's groundbreaking work in "human ecology", these environments — from the family to economic and political structures — have come to be viewed as part of the life course from childhood through adulthood.
Role of experience
A significant question in developmental psychology is the relation between innateness and environmental influence in regard to any particular aspect of development. This is often referred to as "
nature versus nurture" or
nativism versus
empiricism. A nativist account of development would argue that the processes in question are innate, that is, they are specified by the organism's
genes. An empiricist perspective would argue that those processes are acquired in interaction with the environment. Today developmental psychologists rarely take such extreme positions with regard to most aspects of development; rather they investigate, among many other things, the relationship between innate and environmental influences. One of the ways in which this relationship has been explored in recent years is through the emerging field of
evolutionary developmental psychology.
One area where this innateness debate has been prominently portrayed is in research on
language acquisition. A major question in this area is whether or not certain properties of human language are specified genetically or can be acquired through
learning. The nativist position argues that the input from language is too impoverished for infants and children to acquire the structure of language. Linguist
Noam Chomsky asserts that, evidenced by the lack of sufficient information in the language input, there is a
universal grammar that applies to all human languages and is pre-specified. This has led to the idea that there is a special cognitive
module suited for learning language, often called the
language acquisition device.
The empiricist position on the issue of language acquisition suggests that the language input does provide the necessary information required for learning the structure of language and that infants acquire language through a process of
statistical learning. From this perspective, language can be acquired via general learning methods that also apply to other aspects of development, such as perceptual learning. There is a great deal of evidence for components of both the nativist and empiricist position, and this is a hotly debated research topic in developmental psychology.
On the other hand, Chomsky's critique of a specific empiricist position on this issue,
radical behaviorist Burrhus Frederic Skinner's ''
Verbal Behavior'' written in 1957, is widely considered among developmental psychologists to have sparked the decline in influence of behaviorism and signaled the beginning of the
cognitive revolution in psychology.
Mechanisms of development
Developmental psychology is concerned not only with describing the characteristics of psychological change over time, but also seeks to explain the principles and internal workings underlying these changes. Understanding these factors is aided by the use of
models. Developmental models are often
computational, but they do not necessarily need to be. A model must simply account for the means by which a process takes place. This is sometimes done in reference to changes in the
brain that may correspond to changes in behavior over the course of the development. Computational accounts of development often use either
symbolic,
connectionist (
neural network), or
dynamical systems models to explain the mechanisms of development.
History of developmental psychology
The modern form of developmental psychology has its roots in the rich psychological tradition represented by
Aristotle and
Descartes.
William Shakespeare had his melancholy character ''Jacques'' (in
As You Like It) articulate the
seven ages of man: these included three stages of childhood and four of adulthood. In the mid-eighteenth century
Jean Jacques Rousseau described three stages of childhood: ''infans'' (infancy), ''puer'' (childhood) and ''adolescence'' in ''. Rousseau's ideas were taken up strongly by educators at the time.
In the late nineteenth century, psychologists familiar with the
evolutionary theory of
Darwin began seeking an evolutionary description of psychological development; prominent here was
G. Stanley Hall, who attempted to correlate ages of childhood with previous ages of mankind.
A more scientific approach was initiated by
James Mark Baldwin, who wrote essays on topics that included ''Imitation: A Chapter in the Natural History of Consciousness'' and ''Mental Development in the Child and the Race: Methods and Processes''. In 1905,
Sigmund Freud articulated five
psychosexual stages. Later,
Rudolf Steiner articulated stages of psychological development throughout human life. The first three of these stages, which correspond closely with
Piaget's later-described stages of childhood, were first presented in Steiner's 1911 essay ''The Education of the Child''. By the early to mid-twentieth century, the work of
Vygotsky and
Piaget, mentioned above, had established a strong
empirical tradition in the field.
The role of mothers
Traditionally mothers (and women generally) were emphasized to the exclusion of other caregivers. This has begun to change, with the emphasis now placed on a
primary caregiver (regardless of gender or biological relation), as well as all persons directly or indirectly influencing the child (the family system). However, studies are showing that the role of the mother/father are more significant than first thought as we moved into the concept of primary caregiver.
The role of fathers
Because the traditional role of the father was more the breadwinner, and less the direct caregiver of an infant, he has been traditionally viewed as impacting an infant indirectly through interactions with the mother of the child.
However, in a study published in Child Development May/June 2003, Volume 74, Number 3, Pages 801-821, Bruce J. Ellis, et al, found that presence of the natural father was the most significant factor in reducing rates of early sexual activity and rates of teenage pregnancy in girls. The study found that early father absent girls had the highest rates, with late father absent girls second, and with father present girls having the lowest rates of early sexual activity and preteen pregnancy. Covariate factors used included early conduct problems, maternal age at first childbirth, race, maternal education, father's occupational status, family living standards, family life stress, early mother-child interaction, measures of psychosocial adjustment and educational achievement, school qualifications, mood disorder, anxiety disorder, suicide attempts, violent offending, and conduct disorder. With the single exception of GPA in the USA data set, all covariant factors were found to be dichotomous with respect to the father absence factor and the behavior studied through chi-squared analysis. Studies were conducted in the USA and New Zealand.
Studies
[1] have shown that children as young as 15 months benefit significantly from substantial engagement with their father.
Fathers have a substantial impact on child academic performance. Studies found that "fathers in two-parent families and nonresident fathers who were moderately or highly involved in their children's school had children who were significantly more likely than children with less involved fathers to receive mostly high marks, enjoy school, and never repeat a grade."
[2]
There is a strong link between a child who is fatherless and criminal activity by that child. In a study of mostly low-income African-American and Hispanic families, professor Rebekah Levine Coley, found that "Nonresident fathers in low-income, minority families appear to be an important protective factor for adolescents…Greater involvement from fathers may help adolescents develop self-control and self-competence, and may decrease the opportunities adolescents have to engage in problem behaviors."
[3]
"Children with active, involved fathers have better social skills, are healthier, and do better in school", according to Duane Wilson, the Proud Fathers, Proud Parents program coordinator for the Department of Human Services in the State of Michigan.
[4] (2:57)
Criticisms
Many critics of developmental psychology have noted that studies in the field often fail to normalize for the effects of genetics. For instance, results from twin and adoption studies indicate that
IQ and the
Big Five Personality Traits are heritable, meaning that they run in families due to genetics. On the other hand, many studies in developmental psychology fail to account for
heritability. In her book
The Nurture Assumption, author
Judith Harris argues that family envirnonmental effects often do not effectively explain the variance for most traits (such as adult
IQ and the
Big Five personality traits) in the general population of the United States. On the contrary, Harris suggests that either peer groups or random environmental factors (i.e., those that are independent of family upbringing and socioeconomic status of origin) are more important than family environmental effects
[1] [2]
The book was a 1999
Pulitzer Prize finalist.
Stages of development
Prenatal
The prenatal development of human beings is viewed in three separate stages:
#Germinal (conception through week 2)
#
Embryonic (weeks 3 through 8)
#
Fetal (week 9 through birth)
These stages are not the same as the
trimesters of a woman's pregnancy.
The germinal stage begins when a
sperm penetrates an
egg in the act of
conception (normally the result of
sexual intercourse between a
man and a
woman). At this point a
zygote is formed. Through the process of
mitosis the cells divide and double.
The embryonic stage occurs once the zygote has firmly implanted itself into the uterine wall. It is in this stage that the
vital organs are formed, and while the external body is still extremely dissimilar from an adult human, some features such as eyes and arms, and eventually ears and feet become recognizable.
The fetal period is when the brain most substantially forms, becoming more and more complex over the last few months.
During pregnancy the risk to the developing child from
drugs and other
teratogens,
spousal abuse and other
stress on the mother,
nutrition and the age of the mother are quite acute.

A baby in its mother's womb, viewed in a sonogram
Three methods of determining fetal defects and health include the
ultrasound,
amniocentesis, and
chorionic villus sampling.
Ultrasound uses sound waves and a computer monitor, and is non-invasive, thus minimizing potential harm to fetus and mother. Unfortunately its ability to determine potential defect is also far less comprehensive than more risky methods.
Chorionic villus sampling is a form of prenatal diagnosis to determine genetic abnormalities in the
fetus. It entails getting a sample of the
chorionic villus (
placental tissue) and testing it. It is generally carried out only on pregnant women over the age of 35 and those who have a higher risk of
Down syndrome and other chromosomal conditions.
The advantage of CVS is that it can be carried out at 10-12 weeks of pregnancy, earlier than
amniocentesis (which is carried out at 15-18 weeks). However, it is more risky than amniocentesis, with a 1 in 100 to 200 risk that it will cause a
miscarriage.
Amniocentesis is another
medical procedure used for
prenatal diagnosis, in which a small amount of
amniotic fluid is extracted from the
amnion around a developing
fetus. It is usually offered when there may be an increased risk for genetic conditions (i.e.
Down syndrome,
sickle-cell disease,
cystic fibrosis, etc) in the pregnancy. Amniocentesis done in the second trimester is often said to have a risk of fetal death between about 1 in 400 and 1 in 200. Often,
genetic counseling is done before amniocentesis, or other types of
genetic testing, is offered.
Although difficult, some methods of treating fetal disorders have been developed, both surgical and drug based. Genetic testing prior to pregnancy is also increasingly available.
Infancy
From birth until the child begins to speak, they are referred to as an
infant. Developmental psychologists vary widely in their assessment of the infant's psychology, and the influence the outside world has upon it, but certain aspects are relatively clear.
While no agreement has yet been reached regarding the level of stimulation an infant requires, we are well aware that a normal level of stimulation is very important, and that a lack of stimulation and affection can result in retardation and a host of other developmental and social disorders. Some feel that
classical music, particularly
Mozart is good for an infant's mind. While some tentative research has shown it to be helpful to older children, no conclusive evidence is available involving infants.
The majority of an infant's time is spent in sleep. At first this sleep is evenly spread throughout the day and night, but after a couple of months they generally become
diurnal.
Infants can be seen to have 6 states, grouped into pairs:
★ quiet sleep and active sleep (
dreaming, when
REM occurs)
★ quiet waking, and active waking
★ fussing and
crying
Infants respond to stimuli differently when in these different states.
Habituation is frequently used in testing
psychological phenomenon. Both infants and adults look less and less as a result of consistent exposure to a particular stimulus. The amount of time spent looking to a presented alternate stimulus (after habituation to the initial stimulus) is indicative of the strength of the remembered percept of the previous stimulus, or dishabituation.
Habituation is used to discover the resolution of perceptual systems, for example, by habituating a subject to one stimulus, and then observing responses to similar ones, one can detect the smallest degree of difference that is detectable by the subject.
Infants have a wide variety of reflexes, some of which are permanent (blinking, gagging), and others transient in nature. Some with obvious purposes, some are clearly vestigial and some do not have obvious purposes. Primitive reflexes reappear in adults under certain conditions. Namely, neurological conditions like
dementia, traumatic lesions, etc. A partial list of
infantile reflexes includes:
★
Moro reflex or startle reflex:
#
Startle
#spreading out the
arms (
abduction)
#unspreading the arms (
adduction)
#
Crying (usually)
★
Tonic neck reflex or fencer's reflex
★
Rooting reflex,
sucking reflex, suckling reflex: can be initiated by scratching the infant's cheek; the reaction is pursing of the lips for sucking.
★
Stepping reflex, step-up reflex: can be initiated if you support the infant upright from its armpits below a given surface so the baby lifts its foot and steps up on the surface (like climbing a stair).
★
Grasp reflex: can be initiated by scratching the infant's palm.
★
Parachute reflex: the infant is suspended by the trunk and suddenly lowered as if falling for an instant. The child spontaneously throws out the arms as a protective mechanism. The parachute reflex appears before the onset of walking.
★
Plantar reflex or Babinski reflex: a finger is stroked firmly down the outer edge of the baby's sole; the toes spread and extend out.
Infants have particularly poor
vision, and are
legally blind. They are capable of sight, however blurry. This improves over time, based on experience. Infants less than 2 months old are also thought to be
color blind.
Hearing is well-developed prior to birth, however, and a preference for the mother's heartbeat is well established. Infants are fairly good at detecting the direction from which a sound comes, and by 18 months their hearing ability is approximately equal to that of adults.
Smell and
taste are present, with infants having been shown to prefer the smell and taste of a banana, while rejecting the taste of shrimp. There is good evidence for infants preferring the smell of their mother to that of others.
Infants have a fully developed sense of touch at birth, and the myth believed by some doctors even today that infants feel no pain is inaccurate. Doctors are slowly becoming aware of the need for pain prevention for newborns.
Piaget felt that there were several sensorimotor stages within his broader
Theory of cognitive development.
★ The first sub-stage occurs from birth to six weeks and is associated primarily with the development of
reflexes. Three primary reflexes are described by Piaget:
sucking of objects in the mouth, following moving or interesting objects with the eyes, and closing of the hand when an object makes contact with the palm (
palmar grasp). Over these first six weeks of life, these reflexes begin to become voluntary actions; for example, the palmar reflex becomes intentional grasping. (Gruber and Vaneche, 1977
[3]).
★ The second sub-stage occurs from six weeks to four months and is associated primarily with the development of
habits. Primary circular reactions or repeating of an action involving only ones own body begin. An example of this type of reaction would involve something like an infant repeating the motion of passing their hand before their face. Also at this phase, passive reactions, caused by
classical or
operant conditioning, can begin (Gruber et al., 1977).
★ The third sub-stage occurs from four to nine months and is associated primarily with the development of
coordination between
vision and
prehension. Three new abilities occur at this stage: intentional grasping for a desired object, secondary circular reactions, and differentiations between ends and means. At this stage, infants will intentionally grasp the air in the direction of a desired object, often to the amusement of friends and family. Secondary circular reactions, or the repetition of an action involving an external object occur begin; for example, moving a switch to turn on a light repeatedly. The differentiation between means also occurs. This is perhaps one of the most important stages of a child's growth as it signifies the dawn of
logic (Gruber et al., 1977). Towards the late part of this sub-stage infants begin to have a sense of
object permanence, passing the
A-not-B error test.
★ The fourth sub-stage occurs from nine to twelve months and is associated primarily with the development of logic and the coordination between means and ends. This is an extremely important stage of development, holding what Piaget calls the "first proper
intelligence." Also, this stage marks the beginning of
goal orientation, the deliberate planning of steps to meet an objective (Gruber et al. 1977).
★ The fifth sub-stage occurs from twelve to eighteen months and is associated primarily with the discovery of new means to meet goals. Piaget describes the child at this juncture as the "young scientist," conducting pseudo-experiments to discover new methods of meeting challenges (Gruber et al. 1977).
★ The sixth sub-stage is associated primarily with the beginnings of
insight, or true
creativity. This marks the passage into the preoperational stage.

Special methods are required to study infant behavior.
When studying infants, the habituation methodology is an example of a method often used to assess their performance. This method allows researchers to obtain information about what types of
stimuli an infant is able to discriminate. In this
paradigm, infants are habituated to a particular stimulus and are then tested using different stimuli to evaluate discrimination. The critical measure in habituation is the infants' level of interest. Typically, infants prefer stimuli that are novel relative to those they have encountered previously. Several methods are used to measure infants' preference. These include the high-amplitude sucking procedure, in which infants suck on a pacifier more or less depending on their level of interest, the conditioned foot-kick procedure, in which infants move their legs to indicate preference, and the head-turn preference procedure, in which the infant's level of interest is measured by the amount of time spent looking in a particular direction. A key feature of all these methods is that, in each situation, the infant controls the stimuli being presented. This gives researchers a means of measuring discrimination. If an infant is able to discriminate between the habituated stimulus and a novel stimulus, they will show a preference for the novel stimulus. If, however, the infant cannot discriminate between the two stimuli, they will not show a preference for one over the other.
Object permanence is an important stage of cognitive development for infants. Numerous tests regarding it have been done, usually involving a toy, and a crude barrier which is placed in front of the toy, and then removed, repeatedly. In sensorimotor stages 1 and 2, the infant is completely unable to comprehend object permanence.
Jean Piaget conducted experiments with infants which led him to conclude that this awareness was typically achieved at eight to nine months of age. Infants before this age are too young to understand object permanence, which explains why infants at this age do not cry when their mothers are gone. "Out of sight, out of mind." A lack of Object Permanence can lead to
A-not-B errors, where children reach for a thing at a place where it should not be. (see also:
Infant metaphysics)
Toddler
Intelligence is demonstrated through the use of symbols, language use matures, and memory and imagination are developed. Thinking is done in a nonlogical, nonreversible manner.
Egocentric thinking predominates.
Socially, toddlers are little people attempting to become independent. They walk, talk, use the toilet, and get food for themselves.
Self-control begins to develop. If taking the initiative to explore, experiment, risk mistakes in trying new things, and test their limits is encouraged by the caretaker(s) the child will become
autonomous, self-reliant, and confident. If the caretaker is overprotective or disapproving of independent actions, the toddler may begin to doubt their abilities and feel ashamed for the desire for independence. The child's autonomic development will be inhibited, and be less prepared to successfully deal with the world in the future.
Early Childhood
When children go to preschool, they broaden their social horizons and become more engaged with those around them. Impulses are channeled into fantasies, which leaves the task of the caretaker to balance eagerness for pursuing adventure, creativity and self expression with the development of responsibility. If caretakers are properly encouraging while being consistently disciplinary, children are more likely to develop positive self-esteem while becoming more responsible, and will follow through on assigned activities. If not allowed to decide which activities to perform, children may begin to feel guilt upon contemplating taking initiative. This negative association with independence will lead them to let others make decisions in place of them.
Childhood
In this stage intelligence is demonstrated through logical and systematic manipulation of symbols related to concrete objects. Operational thinking develops, which means actions are reversible, and egocentric thought diminishes.
Children go through the transition from the world at home to that of school and peers. Children learn to make things, use tools, and acquire the skills to be a worker and a potential provider. Children can now receive feedback from outsiders about their accomplishments. If children can discover pleasure in intellectual stimulation, being productive, seeking success, they will develop a sense of competence. If they are not successful or cannot discover pleasure in the process, they may develop a sense of inferiority and feelings of inadequacy that may haunt them throughout life. This is when children think of them selves as industrious or as inferior.
Adolescence
Adolescence is the period of life between the onset of puberty and the full commitment to an adult social role, such as worker, parent, and/or citizen. It is the period known for the formation of personal and social identity (see
Erik Erikson) and the discovery of moral purpose (see
William Damon). Intelligence is demonstrated through the logical use of symbols related to abstract concepts and formal reasoning. A return to
egocentric thought often occurs early in the period. Only 35% develop the capacity to reason formally during adolescence or adulthood. (Huitt, W. and Hummel, J. January 1998)
[5]
The adolescent asks "Who am I? Who do I want to be?" Like toddlers, adolescents must explore, test limits, become
autonomous, and commit to an
identity, or
sense of self. Different roles, behaviours and
ideologies must be tried out to select an identity. Role confusion, inability to choose vocation, sexual orientation and one's role in life can result from a failure to achieve a sense of identity.
Early Adulthood
The person must learn how to form intimate relationships, both in friendship and love. The development of this skill relies on the resolution of other stages. It may be hard to establish intimacy if you haven't developed trust or a sense of identity. If this skill is not learned the alternative is alienation, isolation, a fear of commitment, and the inability to depend on others.
Middle age
Middle adulthood generally refers to the period between ages 35 to 60. During this period, the middle-aged experience a conflict between generativity and stagnation. They may either feel a sense of contributing to the next generation and their community or a sense of purposelessness.
Physically, the middle-aged experience a decline in muscular strength, reaction time, sensory keenness, and cardiac output. Also, women experience
menopause and a sharp drop in the hormone
estrogen. Men do not have an equivalent to menopause, but they do experience a decline in
sperm count and speed of
ejaculation and
erection.
Most men and women remain capable of sexual satisfaction after middle age.
Old age
This stage generally refers to those over 60 years. During old age, people experience a conflict between integrity vs. despair. When reflecting on their life, they either feel a sense of accomplishment or failure.
Physically, older people experience a decline in muscular strength, reaction time, stamina, hearing, distance perception, and the sense of smell. They also are more susceptible to severe diseases such as cancer and pneumonia due to a weakened immune system. Mental disintegration may also occur, leading to
Dementia or
Alzheimer's Disease. However, partially due to a lifetime's accumulation of antibodies, the elderly are less likely to suffer from common diseases such as the cold or flu.
Whether or not intellectual powers increase or decrease with age remains controversial.
Longitudinal studies have suggested that intellect declines, while
cross-sectional studies suggest that intellect is stable. It is generally believed that
crystallized intelligence increases up to old age, while
fluid intelligence decreases with age.
Death
see
Erikson's stages of psychosocial development
Schools of psychology
Cognitive development
Main articles: Cognitive psychology
Main articles: Cognitive development
Cognitive development is primarily concerned with the ways in which infants and children acquire and develop internal mental capabilities such as problem solving, memory, and language.. Major topics in cognitive development are the study of language acquisition and the development of perceptual and motor skills. Piaget was one of the influential early psychologists to study the development of cognitive abilities. His theory suggests that development proceeds through a set of stages from infancy to adulthood and that there is an end point or goal. Other accounts, such as that of Lev Vygotsky, have suggested that development does not progress through stages rather that the development process that begins at birth and continues until death is too complex for such structure and finality. Rather, from this viewpoint, developmental processes proceed more continuously, thus it should be analyzed, instead of a product to be obtained.
In addition, modern cognitive development has largely moved away from Piagetian stage theories, and is influenced by accounts of
domain specificity, which argue that development is guided by innate evolutionarily specificed and content-specific information processing mechanisms.
Social development
Main articles: Social psychology (psychology)
Social psychology is the study of the nature and causes of human
social behavior, with an emphasis on how people think towards each other and how they relate to each other. As the mind is the axis around which social behavior pivots, social psychologists tend to study the relationship between mind(s) and social behaviors. In early-modern social science theory,
John Stuart Mill, Comte, and others, laid the foundation for social psychology by asserting that human
social cognition and behavior could and should be studied scientifically like any other
natural science.
Attachment Theory
Main articles: Attachment Theory
Attachment Theory focuses on close, intimate, emotionally meaningful relationships. Its methods of study involve such approaches as the Strange Situation Protocol developed by
Mary Ainsworth and the Adult Attachment Interview developed by
Mary Main. Attachment Theory was developed by Sir
John Bowlby. The attachment is described as a biological system that evolved to ensure the survival of the infant. Attachment behavior is evoked whenever the person is threatened or stressed and involves actions to move toward the person(s) who create a sense of physical, emotional and psychological safety for the individual. See also the critique by developmental psychology pioneer
Jerome Kagan.
Research methods
Developmental psychology employs many of the
research methods used in other areas of psychology. However, infants and children cannot always be tested in the same ways as adults, so different methods are often used to study their development.
Child research methods
When studying older children, especially adolescents, adult measurements of behavior can often be used, but they may need to be simplified to allow children to perform certain tasks.
Lifespan development
Developmental psychologists have a number of methods to study changes in individuals over time.
In a
longitudinal study, a researcher observes many individuals born at or around the same time (a
cohort) and carries out new observations as members of the cohort age. This method can be used to draw conclusions about which types of development are universal (or
normative) and occur in most members of a cohort. Researchers may also observe ways in which development varies between individuals and hypothesize about the causes of variation observed in their data. Longitudinal studies often require large amounts of time and funding, making them unfeasible in some situations. Also, because members of a cohort all experience historical events unique to their generation, apparently normative developmental trends may in fact be universal only to their cohort.
In a
cross-sectional study, a researcher observes differences between individuals of different ages at the same time. This generally requires less resources than the longitudinal method, and because the individuals come from different cohorts, shared historical events are not so much of a
confounding factor. By the same token, however, cross-sectional research may not be the most effective way to study differences between participants, as these differences may result not from their different ages but from their exposure to ''different'' historical events.
An
accelerated longitudinal design or
cross-sequential study combines both methodologies. Here, a researcher observes members of different birth cohorts at the same time, and then tracks all participants over time, charting changes in the groups. By comparing differences and similarities in development, one can more easily determine what changes can be attributed to individual or historical environment, and which are truly universal. Clearly such a study can be even more resource-consuming than a longitudinal study.
Additionally, these are all
correlational, not
experimental, designs, and so one cannot readily infer
causation from the data they yield. Nonetheless, correlational research methods are common in the study of development, in part due to
ethical concerns. In a study of the effects of poverty on development, for instance, one cannot easily
randomly assign certain families to a poverty condition and others to an affluent one, and so observation alone has to suffice.
Theorists & theories
★
Jean Piaget:
Theory of cognitive development
★
Lawrence Kohlberg:
Kohlberg's stages of moral development
★
Jerome Bruner:
Cognitive (
Constructivist)
Learning theory /
Narrative Construction of Reality
★
Lev Vygotsky:
Social Contextualism /
Zone of Proximal Development
★
Urie Bronfenbrenner:
Ecological Systems Theory
★
Jerome Kagan: one of the key pioneers of developmental psychology
★
John Bowlby,
Harlow & Harlow,
Mary Ainsworth:
Attachment theory
★
Erik Erikson:
Erikson's stages of psychosocial development
★
Sigmund Freud:
psychosexual development
★
Emmy Werner:
resilience, risk & protective factors in human development
See also
★
Annotated Bibliography: a list of prominent works in developmental psychology
★
Cognitive development
★
Developmental stage
★
Developmental psychopathology
★
Evolutionary developmental psychopathology
★
Evolutionary educational psychology
★
Life history theory
★
Pre- and perinatal psychology
Notes
1. http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:etWy56SPQQYJ:home.att.net/~xchar/tna. Website
for "The Nurture Assumption."
2. http://home.att.net/~xchar/tna/edge2006.htm
3.
★ Piaget, J. (1977). "The essential Piaget" ed by Howard E. Gruber and J. Jacques Voneche Gruber, New York: Basic Books
Further reading
★ Bjorklund, D.F. & Pellegrini, A.D. (2000). Child Development and Evolutionary Psychology. ''Child Development, 71,'' 1687-1708.
Full text
★ Geary, D. C., & Bjorklund, D. F. (2000). Evolutionary developmental psychology. ''Child Development, 71,'' 57-65.
Full text
★ Johnson-Pynn, J., Fragaszy, D.M., & Cummins-Sebree, S. (2003). Common territories in comparative and developmental psychology: The quest for shared means and meaning in behavioral investigations. ''International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 16,'' 1-27.
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★ MacDonald, K., & Hershberger, S. (2005). Theoretical Issues in the Study of Evolution and Development. In R. Burgess and K. MacDonald (Eds.), ''Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Development, 2nd edition,'' pp. 21–72. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Full text
External links
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Developmental Psychology: Practical Concepts for a Smooth Life Journey
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Developmental Psychology: lessons for teaching and learning developmental psychology
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GMU’s On-Line Resources for Developmental Psychology: a web directory of Developmental Psychology organizations
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Psychology Resources
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Developmental psychology at The Psychology Wiki
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Developmental psychology forum
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Psychology Wikia IRC channel
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The British Psychological Society
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Association of Child Psychologists in Private Practice - AChiPPP (UK)