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Hint
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Answer
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Periods of life initiated by distinct transitions in physical or psychological functioning.
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developmental stages
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Who created the Cognitive Theory of Development
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Piaget
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What was the three word summary of the Cognitive Theory of Development
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Discontinuous stage model
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Mental structures that guide thinking
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Schemas
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First Pillar of the Cognitive Theory of Development
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Schemas
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Second Pillar of the Cognitive Theory of Development
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Assimilation and accommodation
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Third Pillar of the Cognitive Theory of Development
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Stages of cognitive development
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First stage Piaget's theory (Birth to age 2): Children mostly give reflexive responses with very little thinking involved.
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Sensorimotor
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Fear of strangers
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Stranger Anxiety
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The knowledge that objects exist independently of one’s own actions or awareness.
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Object Permanence
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(2 to 6/7 years of age): A stage marked by well-developed mental representation and the use of language.
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Preoperational
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(7 to 11 years): child develops the abilities of irreversibility, conservation and mental operations. They can think logically about concrete events.
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Concrete operational stage
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Last stage: people begin to think about issues like being more accepted by peers, and abstract issues like love, fairness and our reason for existence.
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Formal operational Stage
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The ability to infer (understand) other’s mental states, and know they may be different than our own.
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Theory of Mind
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Who said: the emphasis on how the child’s mind grows through interaction with the social environment.
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Vygotsky
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The level of how able you are to solve problems without the help of adults
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Zone of Proximal Development
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This Psychologist has a famous theory on Morals
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Kohlberg
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Moral code is shaped by the standards of adults and the consequences of following or breaking their rules
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Pre-conventional morality
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Internalize the standards of adult role models and act to maintain social order and fit in group
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Conventional morality
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Individual Judgement based on self-chosen principles, and moral reasoning is based on individual rights and justice
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Post-conventional morality
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Psychologist who saw human development as a sequence of psychosocial stages, defined by common problems that emerge throughout life.
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Erickson
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First stage 0-12 months
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Trust vs Mistrust
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1-3 years
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Autonomy vs self-doubt
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3-6 years
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initiative vs guilt
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6-puberty
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competence vs inferiority
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Adolescence
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Identity vs Role Confusion
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Early Adulthood
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Intimacy vs Isolation
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Middle Adulthood
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Generativity vs Stagnation
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Late adulthood
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Ego-Identity vs Despair
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Development period before birth
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Prenatal
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Birth- one month
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neonatal
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1 month- 18/24 months
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Infancy
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substances from the environment that can damage the developing baby.
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Teratogens
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close coordination between the gazing, vocalizing, touching and smiling of mothers and infant
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Synchronicity
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the enduring social-emotional relationship between a child and parent or caregiver.
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Attachment
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when a powerful attraction occurs between infants and the first moving object or individual they spend time with.
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Imprinting
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Parenting style where Parent is warm, attentive and sensitive to child’s needs and interests
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Authoritative
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Parenting style where the parent is cold and rejecting; frequently degrades the child
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Authoritarian
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Parenting style where the parent is warm but may spoil the child
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Permissive
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Parenting style where the parent is emotionally detached, withdrawn and inattentive
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Uninvolved
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biological traits.
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Sex
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biological traits and social characteristics.
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Gender
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Lasting change in behavior or mental process as the result of an experience.
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Learning
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learning by associations
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Conditioning
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A learned preference for stimuli to which we have been previously exposed.
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Mere Exposure Effect
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Learning not to respond to the repeated presentation of a stimulus.
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Habituation
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Forms of learning which can be described in terms of stimuli and responses.
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Behavioural Learning
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Any stimulus that produces no conditioned response prior to learning.
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Neutral Stimulus
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A stimulus that automatically-without conditioning or learning- provokes a reflexive response.
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Unconditioned Stimulus
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A response resulting from an unconditioned stimulus without prior learning.
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Unconditioned Response
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The learning stage during which a conditioned response comes to be elicited by the conditioned stimulus.
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Aquisition
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the originally neutral stimulus that gains the power to cause the response.
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Conditioned Stimulus
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response elicited by a previously neutral stimulus that has become associated with the unconditioned stimulus.
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Conditioned Response
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The diminishing (or lessening) of a learned response, when an unconditioned stimulus does not follow a conditioned stimulus.
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Extinction
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The response after a rest period of an extinguished conditioned response.
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Spontaneous Recovery
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Similar stimuli can create a conditioned response.
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Generalization
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The ability to distinguish between two similar signals stimulus.
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Discrimination
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A form of learning in which the probability of a response is changed by its consequences.
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Operant Conditioning
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The idea that responses that produced desirable results would be learned, or “stamped” into the organism.
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Law of Effect
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________ is a condition in which the presentation or removal of a stimulus, that occurs after a response (behavior), strengthens that response or makes it more likely to happen again in the future.
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Reinforcer
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A stimulus presented after a response that increases the probability of that response happening again
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Positive Reinforcement
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something that is naturally reinforcing: food, warmth, water, pleasure
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Primary Reinforcement
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something you have learned is a reward because it is paired with a primary reinforcement in the long run:
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Secondary Reinforcement
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The removal of an unpleasant stimulus that increases the probability of that response happening again.
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Negative Reinforcement
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A reinforcement schedule under which all correct responses are reinforced
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Continuous Reinforcement
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A technique where new behavior is produced by reinforcing responses that are similar to the desired response.
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Shaping
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A type of reinforcement schedule by which some, but not all, correct responses are reinforced.
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Intermittent Reinforcement
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rewards subjects after a certain time interval.
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Interval schedule
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rewards subjects after a certain number of responses.
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Ratio Schedule
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A schedule that a rewards a learner only for the first correct response after some defined period of time.
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Fixed interval schedule
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A reinforcement schedule that rewards a response only after a defined number of correct answers.
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Fixed ratio schedule
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an adverse/disliked stimulus which occurs after a behavior, and decreases the probability it will occur again.
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Punishment
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An undesirable event that follows a behavior: washing your mouth out with soap after cursing
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Positive punishment
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When a desirable event ends or is taken away after a behavior.
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Negative punishment
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changes in mental processes, rather than as changes in behavior alone
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Cognitive learning
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A mental representation of a place.
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Cognitive Map
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Learning that occurs but is not apparent until the learner has an incentive to demonstrate it.
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Latent Learning
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The hopelessness and passive resignation an animal or human learns when unable to avoid repeated aversive events.
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Learned Helplessness
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Learning in which new responses are acquired after other’s behavior and the consequences of their behavior are observed.
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Observational Learning
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Process of observing and imitating a specific behavior.
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Modeling
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Frontal lobe neurons that fire when performing certain actions or observing another doing so.
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Mirror Neurons
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eduction in emotional arousal and distress when they subsequently observe violent
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Psychic Numbing
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