Practice Questions (True or False)
for Exam 1
Chapter 1
- The scientific study of human development is the
study of how and why people change as they grow older, as well as how and why
they remain the same.
- Understanding development at any age requires a
consideration of the interplay of biosocial, cognitive, and psychosocial
domains of development.
- The concept of childhood as we now know it is
fairly recent construct
- Children are more likely to be valued as an
economic asset in developing, agricultural communities than they are in the
U.S.
- (A Life-Span View) The poorest age group in the
US is people aged 65 and older
- People of many ethnic groups share one culture
- Most developmental psychologists prefer not to
use the scientific method in studying human development
- For the most accurate results, scientific
observation should be preformed in a laboratory
- When two variables are positively correlated, it
means that one causes the other
- A controlled experiment is always the best way to
investigate a developmental issue
Chapter 2
- Developmental theories generally have few
practical applications
- Proponents of learning theory believe that all
behavior arises directly from operate or classical conditioning
- Piaget believed that how people think and how
they understand the world depends on their age
- Many psychoanalytic ideas are widely accepted
today
- (Changing Policy) Most psychologist agree that
the nature-nurture controversy has been laid to rest
- Developmental psychologists are increasingly
aware of universal processes of development that are found in all cultures
- The newest theory of development stresses the
ongoing interaction between genes and environmental forces
- Few developmental psychologist today believe that
humans have instincts or abilities that arise from our species� biological
heritage
- All developmental theories attempt to explain the
broad spectrum of human development
- Most developmentalist incorporate ideas from
several theories into their thinking.
Chapter 3
- No two cells of the human body contain exactly
the same genetic instructions.
- The genetic contribution of the father�s sperm
determines whether a fertilized egg develops into a male or female
- It is impossible for a parent to have a child
whose appearance or behavior is completely different from their own
- Not all individuals are born genetically unique
- If identical twine are more similar on a
particular trait that are fraternal twins, this proves the trait inherited
- Genes are never the exclusive determinate of any
psychological characteristics, including intellectual abilities, personality
traits, and psychopathology
- (A Life-Span View) Alcoholism develops primarily
in people from lower SES.
- Middle-aged couples are less likely then younger
couples to produce a child with a chromosomal abnormality
- Everyone carries several genes that could produce
serious diseases or handicaps in their offspring
- Most of the know genetic disorders are
transmitted through recessive genes.
Chapter 4
- Electrical activity in the developing organism�s
brain does not reveal distinct sleeping and waking patterns
- (In person) Newborns remember voices heard in
the womb
- When drugs such as marijuana and alcohol are
taken together, a higher dosage of each is required before either becomes
harmful
- Fortunately, fetuses whose mothers carry the
virus of AIDS develop a natural immunity and thus are at lower risk of
contracting AIDS from their mothers
- Even moderate drinking (1/2 ounce or more per
day) by a pregnant woman may be harmful to the developing organism
- Officially, a baby�s "due date� is
established 266 days after conception
- C-Sections account for less than 10 % of all
births in the US
- Today, most US births occur at home
- Preterm babies tend to be more distractible
then full-term babies
- In both humans and other animals, there is a
critical period of the formulation of the parent-newborn bond.
Chapter 5
- During the first year of life, most infants
triple their body weight
- Proportionally, all parts of the body grow at
about the same rate during the first two years
- At birth, the nervous system contains only a
fraction of the neurons the developing person need
- Al healthy infants develop the same motor skills
in the same sequence
- Age norms for the development of motor skills,
such as sitting up and walking, vary from group to group and place to place
- At birth, newborns cannot focus well on objects
at any distance
- At birth, infants vision is better developed than
their hearing
- About 7 % of the world�s children are severely
protein-calorie malnourished in their early years
- The primary causes of malnutrition in the
developing countries is early cessation of breast-feeding
- Undernutrition during infancy always leads to
permanent damage to the underdeveloped brain.
Chapter 6
- Most developmentalists consider perception to be
an automatic process that everyone experiences the same way
- Only infants aged 9 months or older notice the
difference between a solid surface and an apparent cliff
- If a 5-month-old drops a rattle out of the crib,
the baby will not look down to search for it
- Infants younger than 6 months can categorize
objects according to their angularity, shape, and destiny
- Infant�s long-term memory is actually very good
- Adults are generally unable to remember events
that occurred before they were about 2 year of age
- Children the world over follow the same sequence
in early language development
- Deaf babies begin to make babbling sounds several
months later than hearing infants do
- When they first begin combining words, infants
tend to put them in reverse order, as in "juice more"
- Most developmentalist believe that they
"baby talk" adults use when conversing with infants actually hinders
language development.
Chapter 7
- Infants come into the world equipped with the
basic social predisposition and skills that contribute to their development
- Social referencing � searching the expressions
of others for emotional cues � becomes very important as infants being
crawling and walking
- Infants use their father for emotional cues in
uncertain situations as much as their mothers
- In the traditional view of personality
development, mothers and father share equally in shaping infant character
- According to Freud, an adult who eats, drinks,
chews, bites, or smokes excessively may have been weaned too early
- The results of many controlled experiment support
Freud�s theory of infant development
- (Changing Policy) According to the leading
developmental psychologist, high-quality day care, even during the infant�s
first year, does not lead to negative developmental outcomes
- (research Report) In part because of inborn
temperamental characteristics, some children are more difficult to raise and
harder to live with
- Infants in different cultures manifest attachment
to their primary caregivers in different ways
- Attachment patterns established in infancy almost
never change.
Answer Key
Chapter 1 |
Chapter 2 |
Chapter 3 |
Chapter 4 |
Chapter 5 |
Chapter 6 |
Chapter 7 |
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1. F |
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