PSY
430 -
N Psychology of Infancy, Spring 2021
TuTh 8:00AM - 9:15AM
Department of Psychology, University of
Miami
Daniel Messinger,
Ph.D., dmessinger@miami.edu
Office Hours: Thursday 12:45 - 1:45, and by appointment
Required Readings: The class is a seminar with students
reading and discussing key journal articles and reviews, which are linked to this syllabus. Readings are chosen to provide
exposure to the theory, methods, and findings of current developmental
research. One reading will be assigned for each
class. Reading assignments marked "Extra" are
suggested but not required.
Format. The instructor
will introduce key concepts, issues, and lines of research. Students are expected to take an active role in discussing and
developing topics under consideration. Everyone is expected
to complete all assigned readings and actively contribute to discussion.
Participation. Participation refers to your level of
engagement in class (30 points). Participation includes submission of at least
12 substantive questions/comments/responses to the Blackboard Discussion Board.
Participation also includes attendance, having clearly done the required
reading, asking pertinent questions, offering informed responses to questions,
and constructive debate. Use of
electronic devices for anything except class work is
prohibited. Attendance is mandatory.
Project. There are two main project choices,
annotated bibliography and section summary (70 points). We will devote class
time and specific class meetings to the project. All written assignments must
be single spaced with an additional space between paragraphs (1”
margins, 12 point font). Only assignments
turned in on time will be graded. Most
assignments will be submitted on Blackboard, typically using SafeAssign as an originality check.
Annotated bibliography
project
The
main project for the class will be the development of an annotated bibliography
that corresponds to the revision of Infant
Development: A Topical Approach (2nd Ed),
that I am revising. You will choose one of seven chapters (Cognition,
Communication, Emotion, Parenting, Family, and Individual Differences). The
choice of chapters and the entire assignment will be a collaborative exercise.
My hope is that the annotated bibliography will support my revision of the
textbook. I intend to acknowledge all individuals who submit an annotated
bibliography in the textbook. The collaborative steps for the annotated
bibliography are:
1. Hyperlink current citations in your chapter. This is an exercise in critical reading that will familiarize you
with the current content of the chapter. I will provide you with a
Google doc of the chapter and its current citations (if you want to edit in Word, that is also possible). You will supplement the
written text of those citations with hyperlinks to the source articles on the
web.
2. Develop a list of approximately 50 agreed
upon citations of empirical articles that update the current citations
and cover roughly the same material as the previous citations and expand
upon them. When you submit, I will indicate which articles should
be replaced by new articles that I will work with you to identify.
3. Write a 2-3 sentence relatively simple
summary of each article that identifies the age of the infants and describes
the study methods (what was done) in one sentence, and
the primary findings of the article in one to two sentences. This is an
exercise in digesting and disseminating results.
Date |
Annotated Bibliography Assignment |
Maximum Points |
Feb 4 |
Choose
project and chapter |
5 |
Feb 11 |
First 5
hyperlinks |
5 |
Feb 25 |
Remaining
chapter hyperlinks |
10 |
Mar 11 |
First 10
citations |
5 |
Mar 18 |
20 additional
citations |
10 |
Mar 25 |
20 additional
citations |
10 |
Apr 1 |
10 summaries |
5 |
Apr 15 |
20 additional
summaries |
10 |
Apr 29 |
20 additional
summaries |
10 |
Total |
|
70 |
Section summary project. Summarize one of three
sections (Cognitive Deveopment, Language, or
Emotional and Social Development) in The
Cambridge Handbook of Infant Development. Each section consists of four
chapters. Summaries will be four single-space pages and will follow the
headings and subheadings of the target chapter. The first two chapter summaries
will be worth 15 points each (due Feb 25 & Mar 18) and the last two will be
worth 20 points each (due Apr 1 and Apr 29).
Your presentations should use Power-Point slides. I prefer figure-based presentations where
the title of each slide is communicative (e.g., not “Results”) and slide titles
do not repeat. I prefer large text (> 24 font). In some instances, online slides exist with
which to present your article. As needed, please edit the slides and/or create
new slides. If you create new slides, please put your last name in the footer
section of the slide (it’s your work). The new slides—only send the slides you will be presenting—will
be due by email 12 hours before class. You should have a balance of
presentations with respect to using existing slides and creating new ones.
Honor Code. Exams and final papers are governed by the honor code. They will
be submitted through BlackBoard SafeAssign. They are governed by the Honor code. Please review the graduate
honor code here.
Office Hours. Office hours (listed above) or
a meeting scheduled after class by email are an ideal setting for me to assist
you with your final paper, exam(s), discussion facilitation, or class
participation.
Evaluation
|
|
Schedule of Classes,
Readings, and Assignments
Jan
26.
Introduction
to Class and Developmental Psychology (ppt1)
Additional
reading:
Spencer,
J. P., Perone, S., & Buss, A. T. (2011). Twenty
years and going strong: A dynamic systems revolution in motor and cognitive
development. Child Development Perspectives, 5, 260-266.
Jan
28.
Developmental
Design, Measurement, & Analysis (lec5.design.ppt)
Feb
2.
The
genetic basis of behavior and development (ppt8)
Chabris,
C. F., Lee, J. J., Cesarini, D., Benjamin, D.
J., & Laibson, D. I. (2015). The Fourth Law
of Behavior Genetics. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 24(4),
304-312. doi:10.1177/0963721415580430
Additional
reading:
Conradt,
E., Beauchaine, T., Abar,
B., Lagasse, L., Shankaran, S., Bada,
H., … Lester, B. (2016). Early caregiving stress
exposure moderates the relation between respiratory sinus arrhythmia reactivity
at 1 month and biobehavioral outcomes at age 3. Psychophysiology,
53(1), 83–96. https://doi.org/10.1111/psyp.12569 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/psyp.12569
Feb
4
The
biological basis of behavior and development (ppt7)
Additional
reading:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v542/n7641/abs/nature21369.html#supplementary-information
Brody,
G. H., Gray, J. C., Yu, T., Barton, A. W., Beach, S. R., Galván,
A., MacKillop, J., Windle,
M., Chen, E., Miller, G. E., & Sweet, L. H. (2017). Protective Prevention
Effects on the Association of Poverty With Brain
Development. JAMA Pediatr,
171(1), 46-52. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapediatrics.2016.2988
Leong,
V., Byrne, E., Clackson, K., Georgieva, S., Lam, S., & Wass,
S. (2017). Speaker gaze increases information coupling between infant and adult
brains. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 114(50), 13290-13295. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1702493114
Feb
9.
Culture
in Development (ppt3)
Cristia, A., Farabolini, G., Scaff, C., Havron, N., & Stieglitz,
J. (2020). Infant-directed input and literacy effects on phonological
processing: Non-word repetition scores among the Tsimane’.
PloS one, 15(9), e0237702. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237702
Additional
reading:
Bornstein, M. H., Putnick, D. L., Rigo, P.,
Esposito, G., Swain, J. E., Suwalsky, J. T. D., Su,
X., Du, X., Zhang, K., Cote, L. R., De Pisapia, N., & Venuti, P. (2017).
Neurobiology of culturally common maternal responses to infant cry. Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(45),
E9465-E9473. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1712022114
Feb 11.
Culture in Development (ppt4).
Additional
reading:
Causadias, J. M., Vitriol, J. A., & Atkin, A. L. (2018). The
cultural (mis) attribution bias in developmental
psychology in the United States. Journal of Applied Developmental
Psychology, 59, 65-74. doi:
10.1016/j.appdev.2018.01.003
Feb 16.
Perceptual
Development (ppt9)
Clerkin, E.M., Hart, E., Rehg, J.M., Yu, C., & Smith, L.B.
(2017). Real-world
visual statistics and infants' first-learned object names. Philosophical
Transactions on The Royal Society B: Biological
Science, 372(1711).
Additional
reading:
Feb 18. NO CLASS:
Perceptual/Attention
Development (ppt10).
NJ
Minar, DJ Lewkowicz Overcoming the other‐race effect in infancy with multisensory
redundancy: 10–12‐month‐olds discriminate dynamic other‐race faces producing speech. Developmental science 21 (4), e12604.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v547/n7663/abs/nature22999.html#supplementary-information
Additional reading:
Yu, C. & Smith,
L.B. (2017) Hand-eye
coordination predicts joint attention. Child Development.
Feb
23. Cognitive Development (ppt11)
Feb
25.
Cognitive
Development (ppt12)
Additional
reading:
Boyer, T. W., Harding, S. M., & Bertenthal, B. I. (2020). The
temporal dynamics of infants' joint attention: Effects of others' gaze cues and
manual actions. Cognition, 197, 104151. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2019.104151
Simpson, E. A., Sclafani, V., Paukner,
A., Kaburu, S. S. K., Suomi, S. J., &
Ferrari, P. F. (2019). Handling newborn monkeys alters later exploratory,
cognitive, and social behaviors. Dev Cogn Neurosci, 35, 12-19. doi:10.1016/j.dcn.2017.07.010
Mar
2.
Language
Development (ppt13)
Warlaumont,
A. S., Richards., J. A., Gilkerson,
J., & Oller, D. K. (2014). A social feedback loop for speech development and its
reduction in autism. Psychological Science, 25(7), 1314–1324. doi: 10.1177/0956797614531023
[supplemental materials, Akhtar
et al., commentary on Warlaumont, Warlaumont
et al. response to Akhtar]
Additional
reading:
Perry,
L.K., Perlman, M., Winter, B., Massaro,
D.W., & Lupyan, G.
(2018). Iconicity in children and adults’ speech. Developmental Science, 21(3),
e12572. doi:
10.1111/desc.12572. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/desc.12572
Mar
4.
Language
Development (ppt14)
Additional
reading:
Mar
9.
Temperament
and Emotion (ppt15)
Mattson,
W. I., Cohn, J. F., Mahoor, M. H., Gangi, D. N., & Messinger, D. S. (2013). Darwin’s Duchenne: Eye constriction during infant joy
and distress. PLOS ONE, 8(11). doi:
10.1371/journal.pone.0080161
Additional reading:
Mar 11. Temperament and Emotion (ppt16)
Final Project
Watts, T. W., Duncan, G. J., & Quan, H. (2018, January). Revisiting the marshmallow test:
A conceptual replication investigating links between early delay of
gratification and later Outcomes. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0956797618761661.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6050075/pdf/10.1177_0956797618761661.pdf
Coffey, J. (2019).
Cascades of infant happiness: Infant positive affect predicts childhood IQ and
adult educational attainment. Emotion, 20. https://doi.org/10.1037/emo0000640
Mar
16.
Face-to-face
interaction (ppt17)
Feldman, R., Rosenthal, Z., & Eidelman, A.
I. (2014). Maternal-Preterm Skin-to-Skin Contact Enhances Child Physiologic
Organization and Cognitive Control Across the First 10 Years of Life.
Biological Psychiatry, 75(1), 56-64. doi:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2013.08.012
Additional reading:
Murray, L., De Pascalis, L.,
Bozicevic, L., Hawkins, L., Sclafani, V., & Ferrari, P. F. (2016). The
functional architecture of mother-infant communication, and the development of
infant social expressiveness in the first two months. Scientific Reports, 6(1),
39019. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep39019.
Beebe, B., D. Messinger, L. E. Bahrick, A. Margolis, K. A. Buck, & H. Chen (2016). A Systems View of Mother-Infant Face-to-Face Communication. Developmental Psychology, 52(4), 556-571.
Mar 18
Still-face
(ppt17)
Sheinkopf
SJ, Tenenbaum EJ, Messinger DS, Miller-Loncar CL, Tronick EZ, LaGasse LL, Shankaran S, Bada H,
Bauer CR, Whitaker TM, Hammond JA, & Lester BM. (2016). Maternal and infant affect at 4 months
predicts performance and verbal IQ at 4 and 7 years in a diverse population.
Developmental Science. doi:
10.1111/desc.12479. PMID: 27774733
Additional reading:
Sheridan, M. A., N. A. Fox, et al. (2012).
"Variation in neural development as a result of exposure to
institutionalization early in childhood." Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
Mar 23.
Predicting attachment (ppt18)
Additional reading:
Fraley RC, Roisman GI, Booth-LaForce C, Owen
MT, Holland AS. Interpersonal and genetic origins of adult attachment styles: a
longitudinal study from infancy to early adulthood. J Pers Soc Psychol.
2013;104(5):817-838. doi:10.1037/a0031435
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4624037/pdf/nihms716035.pdf
Raby, K. L., Roisman, G. I., & Booth-LaForce, C. (2015). Genetic
moderation of stability in attachment security from early childhood to age 18
years: A replication study. Dev Psychol, 51(11), 1645-1649. https://doi.org/10.1037/dev0000053
Mar 25.
Attachment and sensitivity predict.
Socialization Experiences I. Parent-child
relationships (ppt19)
Raby, K. L., Roisman, G. I.,
Fraley, R. C., & Simpson, J. A. (2014). The Enduring Predictive
Significance of Early Maternal Sensitivity: Social and
Academic Competence through Age 32 Years. Child Development,
n/a-n/a. doi: 10.1111/cdev.12325
Additional reading:
Mar 30. (ppt23)
Chen, J., Justice, L. M., Rhoad-Drogalis,
A., Lin, T.-J., & Sawyer, B. (2020). Social Networks of Children With Developmental Language Disorder in Inclusive Preschool
Programs. Child Development, 91(2), 471-487. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13183
Additional reading:
Chen, J., L. M. Justice, A. Rhoad-Drogalis,
T.-J. Lin and B. Sawyer (2018). "Social Networks of Children With Developmental Language Disorder in Inclusive Preschool
Programs." Child Development 0(0).
Gonzalez Villasanti, H., Justice, L. M., Chaparro-Moreno,
L. J., Lin, T. J., & Purtell, K. (2020). Automatized analysis of children's
exposure to child-directed speech in reschool
settings: Validation and application. PloS one,
15(11), e0242511. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242511 https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0242511
Apr 1 Final project and preschool predicts (ppt25)
Additional reading:
Apr 6.
Final
project
Apr 8.
Final
project
Apr 13.
Final
project and Physical growth and motor development.
Hoch, J., *Ossmy, O., W.G. Cole, S.
Hasan, & Adolph, K. (in press). “Dancing”
together: Infant-mother locomotor synchrony. Child Development. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13513
Additional reading:
Ossmy, O., Adolph, K.E. (2020). Real-time
assembly of coordination patterns in human infants. Current Biology, 30, 1-10.
Hoch, J. E., Rachwani,
J., & Adolph, K. E. (in press). Where infants go: Real-time dynamics of locomotor
exploration in crawling and walking infants . Child
Development.
Apr 15.
Final project and Prematurity.
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2774718
Extra:
Harshaw, C., & Lickliter,
R. (2011). Biased embryos: Prenatal experience and the malleability of
species-typical auditory preferences. Developmental Psychobiology, 53, 291-302.
Apr 20.
Final project and Substance
Exposure.
Extra:
Eze
N, Smith LM, LaGasse LL, Derauf
C, Newman E, Arria A, Huestis
MA, DellaGrotta SA, Dansereau
LM, Neal C, Lester BM. (2016) School-Aged outcomes following prenatal
methamphetamine exposure: 7.5-year follow-up from the Infant Development,
Environment, and Lifestyle Study. The Journal of Pediatrics. EPub ahead of print: doi:10.1016/j.peds.2015.11.070.
Apr 22. Overview Lecture
Data
Drive Development: A Computational Journey
Apr 27.
Beyond Childhood: Transition to parenthood (ppt26)
Hoekzema, E., E. Barba-Müller, C. Pozzobon, M. Picado, F. Lucco, D. García-García, J. C. Soliva, A. Tobeña, M. Desco, E. A. Crone, A. Ballesteros, S. Carmona and O. Vilarroya (2016). Pregnancy leads to long-lasting changes in human brain structure. Nature Neuroscience 20: 287. (https://www.nature.com/articles/nn.4458.pdf)
Additional reading.
Atzil, S., Touroutoglou, A., Rudy, T.,
Salcedo, S., Feldman, R., Hooker, J. M., Dickerson, B. C., Catana,
C., & Barrett, L. F. (2017). Dopamine in the medial amygdala network
mediates human bonding. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1612233114 http://www.pnas.org/content/114/9/2361.full.pdf
Apr 29.
ASD. Developmental psychopathology: Autism spectrum disorder.
Martin, K. B., Haltigan, J. D., Ekas, N., Prince,
E. B., & Messinger, D. S. Attachment security differs by later autism spectrum
disorder: A prospective study. Developmental Science, n/a(n/a), e12953. doi:10.1111/desc.12953
Extra:
Constantino, J.
N., Kennon-McGill, S., Weichselbaum, C., Marrus, N., Haider, A., Glowinski, A.
L., Gillespie, S., Klaiman, C., Klin, A., & Jones, W. (2017). Infant
viewing of social scenes is under genetic control and is atypical in autism.
Nature, 547(7663), 340-344. doi: 10.1038/nature22999 http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v547/n7663/abs/nature22999.html#supplementary-information
Nyström, P., Gliga, T., Jobs, E.
N., Gredebäck, G., Charman, T., Johnson, M. H., ... & Falck-Ytter, T.
(2018). Enhanced pupillary light reflex in infancy is associated with autism
diagnosis in toddlerhood. Nature communications, 9(1),
1-5. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-03985-4#:~:text=The%20results%20of%20this%20study,at%203%20years%20of%20age.
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faculty, staff, and students—is required to wear face coverings on campus.
Students are required to do this at all times in the
classroom and when physical distancing cannot be guaranteed. Faculty have the
right to restrict a student from participating in class if the student does not
follow University COVID-19 policies.
Campus Closure: In the event that the UM’s campus closes
unexpectedly for an extended period of time due to a hurricane, pandemic, or
other emergency situation that prevents this course from meeting in person,
students should be prepared to continue their learning through other means as
determined by the instructor. In the most likely scenario, instruction would be delivered remotely through BlackBoard and other
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are expected, to the extent feasible, to continue their participation in their
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