An Introduction to Developmental psychology by A. Slater and G. Bremner (third edition) - a summary
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Developmental psychology
Chapter 21
Atypical development
Two ways in which development can be atypical
Williams syndrome: a rare neurodevelopmental disorder caused by deletion of about 26 genes from the long arm of chromosome 7.
Considering whether a child development is
Quantifying delay
Types of delay
Assessment of delay is not confined exclusively to norms for atypical development. Standardized assessment scales have been designed for use with specific exceptional populations.
The study of atypically developing children provides a profile of the main behaviors associated with a condition withing the context of development across the human lifespan.
This profile has the potential to generate a new knowledge base from which to design and deliver interventions.
Unfortunately, in the context of a relatively young field, there remains insufficient description of the atypical trajectories associated with particular disorders to warrant a sufficiently robust evidence base to inform the design and delivery of interventions fit-for-purpose.
Studying development that is considered atypical can inform us about development that is typical and vice versa.
Autism spectrum disorder: a spectrum of psychological conditions characterized by widespread abnormalities of social interactions and communication, as well as severely restricted interest and highly repetitive behavior.
Congenital blind: the condition of being born unable to see or with severe visual impairment.
Three major developments having an impact on our understanding of pathways in atypical development:
The impact of the human genome project on the study of atypical development
The small number of genes supports the notion that we are not had wired.
The notion that one gene leads to one protein and perhaps one disease is false.
Information contained in the separate genes in thought to ‘mingle’ in complex ways, resulting in a transformation of genetic information.
It seems that multitude of pathways are possible between genotype and expression.
Chromosomal structural abnormalities: an atypical number of chromosomes or a structural abnormality in one or more chromosomes.
Due this type of activity, it is likely to be growing emphasis on the distinction between typical and atypical genetic mechanisms.
Risks associated
Genetic diversity: the total number of genetic characteristics in the genetic make-up of a species.
Amniocentesis: a medical procedure used in prenatal diagnoses of chromosonical abnormalities and foetal infections, in which a small amount of amniotic fluid, which contains foetal tissues, is extracted from the amnion or amniotic sac surrounding a developing foetus, and the foetal DNA is examined for genetic abnormalities.
How advances in brain imaging are aiding understanding of pathways in atypical development
Neuroimagning tools aid localization of brain activity that, in turn, enable developmental psychologists to understand more about the pathways associated with atypical development.
Typically used with children:
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
Abnormalities in aspects of electrical activity in the frontal cortex.
Use of eye-tracking methodology in studies of atypical development
Allows precise measures of visual behavior.
It serves to capture attention with no overt task demands or explicit language requirements.
The researcher is able to exert control over the choice of scenes or stimuli to who participants
Saccades: eye movements in which the fast movement of the eye functions to shift fixation to an object of interest, so that its image is projected to the fovea.
Having control of eye movement allows humans to make saccades to suddenly appearing targets and to suppress such attentional shifts when it would distract from the task at hand.
Atypical conditions of childhood can be characterized according to the type of causal pathways involved.
Williams syndrome
An extremely rare condition.
Studies lack generalizatabilty. Data sets are typically cross-sectional and a huge substatial age band (sometimes the order of 10-20 years).
Frequently, developmental scientists characterize Williams syndrome in terms of making a differentiation between language and cognitive domains.
Specific language impairment (SLI): a developmental language disorder that can affect both production and comprehension and that is unrelated to other atypicalities in development.
When children with Williams syndrome where compared with children with SLI, there was a difference in they ability to use pragmatics.
Difficulties for children with Williams syndrome:
These issues did not affect the children with SLI.
Levels of cognitive functioning appear to interfere with social and pragmatic aspects of communication.
Language skills cannot develop independently from cognitive abilities.
The social phenotype varies across cultures.
Autistic spectrum
Autism is known to be particularly hetrogeneous in terms of how it manifests itself.
Prevalence: 1 in 100
The core diagnostic features are currently defined at the level of behavior. Currently, there are no entirely reliable biological indicators such as brain abnormalities that can diagnose autism.
Post-mortems using PET or MRI reveal evidence of cerebellar deficits, and some studies report a genetic disposition.
DSM-V states impairments in social interaction, impairments in communication and repetitive behavior within a narrow set of interests.
Advent of eye-tracking technology is providing new insights into the nature of the impairments in social interaction as indicated by visual behavior.
Six major subgroups on the autistic spectrum. The subgroups are differentiated by cognitive ability level as measured by IQ and the extend to which there has been any delay in learning to talk.
Explaining autism
Three main theories
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
Relative to typically developing children, those diagnosed with ADHD are excessively hyperactive or impulsive and inattentive.
In the classroom, they show considerable difficulties in maintaining visual attention and are frequently involved in ‘off task’ behavior.
The symptoms of ADHD are known to manifest across the lifespan and frequently co-occur with conduct disorder, and other behavioral disorders.
Cause
hypotheses:
Ordinarily, the development of children with visual impairment would not characteristically be classed as disordered.
It is important to expand:
Once congenitally blind infants have learned to understand language and to speak, they have greater access to the environment through hearing the speech of others related to what is going on around them and in using their own language to elicit information from others about what is going on.
By 6 months of age, blind infants are able to establish a rapport with their caregivers.
Non-visual perceptual information is sufficient for establishing exchanges between blind infants and their parents.
Typically, interactions revolve around rhymes and touching routines.
Blind infant’s hands are an important source of information about affective states.
In contrast to sighted infants, person-person-object style interactions were not established in a reliable way until 21 months.
Established joint attention is comprising as sequence of four behaviors
Blind infants touch
Children with a dual sensory impairment
Around 50 per cent of children who are registered blind have other disabilities.
For those children it is vital to encourage independence across all areas of development, especially in communication and in mobility.
Some forms of atypical development environmental input is likely to be at least a major contributory factor.
Bronfenbrenner’s ecological model
An influential model that places individual human development into the wider context of interaction with the immediate environment, as well as the larger context.
The absence or atypically of experiences that may influence the path of individual development.
Five levels:
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This bundle contains a summary of the book An Introduction to Developmental psychology by A. Slater and G. Bremner (third edition). The book is about development from fetus to elderly. Only the chapters needed in the course 'Developmental psychology' in the first year of
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