An Introduction to Developmental psychology by A. Slater and G. Bremner (third edition) - a summary
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Developmental psychology
Chapter 16
Cognitive development in adolescence
Perception
Perception is one of the cognitive abilities that develop earliest in life.
Children’s perception becomes increasingly flexible.
Ambiguous figures.
Increased flexibility of thought in adolescence allows alternations between the different perspecitves to be easily accomplished in ambiguous figures.
Adolescents can identify both components and wholes.
Selective attention
Development is evident in the adolescent’s superior ability to allocate attentional resources.
Selective attention.
the time it takes for the brain to either receive or output information.
It develops rapidly during childhood and continues to develop during the adolescent years so that older adolescents show faster speed of processing compared to younger adolescents.
This development is at least partially driven by the maturation of white matter in the brain.
By early adulthood memory can be quite remarkable.
There is a rapid development in face processing abilities during childhood and adolescence, with adult-level recognition reached by about 16 years of age.
Is there a qualitative change in face processing between childhood and adolescence?
Proposal
Encoding switch hypothesis: different information abut faces is represented in memory by children at different ages. Young children rely on information about individual features, whereas older children and adults use information bout the configuration of the features.
Face processing emphasizing features is referred to as featural processing.
Face processing emphasizing configuration is configural processing.
Children younger than 10 years of age make identifications largely on the basis of parahernalia items such as hat or glasses.
Younger children’s failure in recognizing the right person may be because they encoded non-essential information for determining identity.
Even face-processing abilities during adolescence are still developing considering their less than adult like levels in face recognition memory.
There is a drop in performance on face recognition tasks occuring at about 11 years of age.
This appears to be influenced by factors such as children’s level of familiarity with the type of face stimuli used and the difficulty of the recognition task.
Hormonal influence?
Short-term memory
Short-term memory increases steadily throughout childhood and into adolescence.
Possible explanations:
There is more sophisticated working memory among older adolescents relative to younger adolescents.
Long-term memory
Its absolute capacity does not appear to change much.
Memory strategies
Developmental differences between adolescents and younger children are evident in the types of strategies used in order to remember information.
This reflects adolescents’ increased knowledge about ways to enhance their memory.
More sophisticated strategy use for remembering information increases throughout childhood.
Effective use of strategies to increase memory may especially proliferate in adolescence.
Rapid development
There are three important characteristics of adolescents’ general intellectual ability.
Stability of development
A particular adolescent’s IQ score is relatively stable and does not change greatly as age increases.
IQ scores are calculated on base of age norms.
Percentile: location of an individual’s development or achievement along a percentage scale.
18-year olds were very similar to their own IQ scores in adolescence. But there is a poor correlation between IQ scores of 18 years and those obtained much earlier.
It might be that children’s general intellectual abilities are more unstable at younger ages than in later years.
Fluid and crystallized intelligence
Typical intelligence tests fail to differentiate between the two types of intelligence and, as a result, IQ scores appear to be stable over time during and after adolescence.
This might be related in changes in the nervous system.
Intergenerational IQ gains: We’re brighter now
Flynn effect.
Genetic factors cannot account for the massive change in IQ scores on such as small timescale.
The effect must be due to certain environmental factors.
Deductive and inductive reasoning
Syllogism: comprises two statements (permisses) and a conclusion that is derived from these previous statements.
Universal and particular quantifiers
Developmentally, Piaget held that true deductive and inductive reasoning could not be carried out until the stage formal operations.
But,
It is true that reasoning improves with age, but it is not the case that adolescents reason reliably. Nor do adults.
Performance varied considerably depending on the form of the premises and conclusion.
Deductive reasoning
Even as adults we often have difficulty distinguishing valid form invalid conclusions in cases of deductive reasoning.
Reason:
The abstract form.
Deductive reasoning was easier than inductive reasoning. By the end of elementary school certain aspects of deductive and inductive reasoning are understood in an abstract sense. It is increasingly understood that what is important is the logical form of the problem and not the content.
Analogical reasoning
Resolving a problem by comparing it to a similar problem that has been solved previously.
Even quite simple analogies are typically beyond the grasp of very young children.
By age 9 to 10 such simple analogies are understood. Analogical reasoning undergoes rapid development after this time.
Three qualitatively distinct stages:
Second-oder analogies: analogies that require the use of crystallized intelligence. In oder to make the connections, one must be able to derive a relationship that is not inherent within the analogy.
The progression is from a very concrete understanding of analogies limited to very familiar content to a much more flexible and abstract understanding.
The term formal operational thinking is used by Piaget to refer to the unique way of thinking in adolescence.
Major feature: reversibility.
Abstract thought
Piaget believed that adolescents are fundamentally different thinkers from concrete operational children.
These operations are abstract, general and content-free.
Interpropositional thinking: where the individual is able to relate one or more parts of a proposition to another part to arrive at a solution to the problem.
Intrapropositonal thinking: the thought of the child in concrete operations, includes concrete content rather than abstract symbols.
Realms of possibility
Piaget theorized that concrete and formal operational children conceptualize the relationship between reality and possibility differently.
Adolescents treat reality as only one of many possibilities.
The adolescent as an apprentice scientist
According to Piaget, adolescents are apprentice scientists who can come up with theories in an attempt to explain certain phenomena, generate hypotheses based on these theories, and systematically devise tests to confirm or refute these hypotheses.
Hypothetico-deductive reasoning.
Scientific problems
According to Piaget, adolescent’s unique way of thinking is manifested in how they solve complex problems.
Do all adolescents reach this stage?
There is failure duplicating findings. Piaget seemed to have over-estimated adolescent’s formal operational thinking.
Researchers now agree that formal operational thinking continues to develop will into adulthood and many adults may never reach this level of thinking.
Adolescents formal operations appears to develop gradually.
The role of experience
Cultural experience plays a important role in the development of formal operational thinking.
And scholar experience.
Cross-generational gains
There is a huge impact of environmental factors on cognitive development.
At equal age, today’s adolescents exhibited a higher level of cognitive development than the adolescents of 20 or 30 years ago.
Gains where the greatest for combinatory thought (taking more than one factor into consideration).
There is a large correlation between participants IQ scores and their scores on cognitive tasks.
Adolescents as rule-based problem-solvers
Information processing approach.
Adolescents thinking is a process of obtaining information form the environment, storing information in the short-term and long-term memory systems, and using various rules and strategies to manipulate information. The goal is to derive new information and to guide actions.
Children and adolescents may not think using general-purpose formal operations that can be applied to problems across various domains.
Thinking is rule-based, and these rules are domain-specific.
Adolescents as intuitive scientists
Children and adolescents are viewed as intuitive scientists.
Cognitive development is domain specific.
Views children as naive theorists, not as rule users.
Three common flaws in children’s and adolescents’ use of theories
General characteristics of adolescent thinking
Five major characteristics:
Different from adults:
Adolescence is a time of continued improvement in planned, goal directed behaviors.
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