The Psychology of Infancy
(PSY344N) Syllabus - Fall 2012
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8:00- 9:15
Flipse Building (5665 Ponce
de Leon, attached to Parking Garage) Room 302
You are responsible for
having an up-to-date copy of this syllabus (only available on-line)
http://www.psy.miami.edu/faculty/dmessinger/c_c/Infancy/i_syll_Fall12.html |
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Daniel Messinger, Ph.D.
(DMessinger@Miami.edu)
(Homepage) Teaching Assistants For weekly papers: Natalie Escobio Bustillo Office Hours: Thursday, 11:00-12:00am, n.escobio@umiami.edu, (305) 284-6677, Flipse 420 For research facilitation and final projects: Brittany Lambert, M.S. Ed. blambert@psy.miami.edu, (305) 284-1042, Flipse 116 |
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In this class, you
will learn about contemporary theory, research, and methodology regarding
infant psychological development
in
two main ways. 1)
Every week, we will address one or two
critical questions related to topics such as:
Is
infancy important? Genetic and environmental influences on development
& temperament. Neurodevelopment & Risk, Resilience, &
Intervention. Sensory development. Cognitive development. Social cognitive
development, joint attention, and autism. Language development. Emotion &
emotion regulation. Social Interaction - Face-to-face/Still-face. Precursors
to attachment. What attachment predicts. My presentations will focus on these critical questions, as will
your readings. Readings will be original research articles and chapters. We
will also discuss and debate critical questions, and watch
videotape examples, do small group exercises, in-class projects and quizzes
to deepen our understanding of what babies are all about. Using these
resources, you will, each week, hand in a one page (300 word) answer to one
of the week's critical questions. This includes all the questions
listed under that critical question. There will also be pop quizzes and
in-class writing to assess
how well you are utilizing the readings and other resources. 2) This course has a large research component in which you will select a final project topic and conduct a mini- empirical research project (collecting data relevant to infancy). One set of potential final project topics comes from my laboratory and includes: measuring the security of attachment, describing parent interaction strategies in the face-to-face/still-face procedure, predicting autism spectrum disorders (ASD) from free-play interactions between parent and one-year-old, predictors of response to intervention among toddlers with ASD, and enactive embodiment of toy movement in the Early Social Communication Scales. Other potential projects are described under the Critical Questions column below, while still others may stem from your own interests and resources. This will require you to bring a laptop computer to class for several class sessions. All final projects must be approved by me. FINAL PROJECT GUIDELINES . As part
of your final project, you will also
conduct a critical reading the scientific literature summarizing and synthesizing five or
more articles and/or reviews and/or scholarly books (books are equivalent to
more than one article/review) on a
topic of your choosing in infant development. You will turn in
the summary/critiques of articles/reviews throughout the semester. I will help you with the selection of
articles and with instruction on how to summarize and critique them. Your
final project should reference any relevant material and assigned readings
from class, but these do not count for your five readings ("extra"
reading can count. Sources for papers for the final projects.
Every empirical paper that you review should focus primarily on infant
development, and be published in one of the following journals after 1990 to
which you may or may not be able to link from here:
Child Development,
Infancy,
Developmental Psychology,
Developmental Science,
Developmental Review, Development & Psychopathology,
Pediatrics, Social Development, Psychological
Bulletin, Intelligence,
or the
International Journal of Behavioral
Development.
If you know what journal an
article is in, you can
review UM’s
psychology databases
here or review all of UM's electronic journal databases
here. (Go
here to learn more about doing research from off-campus.) Most
of the PowerPoint lectures contain a list of helpful references as the final
slide. Also, see the "References" section (p. 415) of Development
for finding specific articles and chapters on a particular topic. You can
also leaf through the journals above to find a topic that interests you. More references for final projects are on the syllabi of my
graduate student courses which you can find
here).
Google scholar may be helpful as well. The final project will involve a 2,000 word research paper, presentation of your final project as a brief PowerPoint lecture to the class, and presenting your poster at a class poster session. Writing resources are available here. (A final project that involves a more extensive and formal empirical study is also a possibility, particularly for those of you conducting relevant research with psychologists in the department, could provide you with honors credit, and is required of students currently working in my lab.) Finally, final papers that involve contributing to Wikipedia are a possibility. Attachment ratings. To produce research data for students that are interested in this topic--and to produce real data for publication--you are required to rate a set of videotapes related to infant attachment. You should not prepare for this rating, just show up. As a rater, you will be a research participant. If you don't want to do this, an alternative assignment is available. Ms. Lambert, one of the TAs will be your contact for making the ratings.
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Class Overview You can
expect that this will be a difficult class, and that I will help you learn as
much as you can, be available to meet, respond to your emails, return your
assignments in a timely fashion, and help you tackle the new material you
will be encountering.
At
the end of the course, you will know how to investigate an interesting
subject in psychology by reviewing the scientific literature and will have
experience in presenting your work in different forms. You will have an
opportunity to read studies and make observations that are of special
interest to you.
If you add the course late, all past
assignments are due on the class session after you add. Grading. Attendance is mandatory. Assignments
will typically be assigned a percentage grade from 1 to 100. Some assignments
will be graded pass/fail. You will receive feedback on your writing
assignments. In addition to turning in your assignments when they are due,
you are responsible for collecting all your work for your final project and
copies of the articles/reviews you used - in an individual portfolio.
Submitting assignments. All assignments must be submitted on BlackBoard before the class for which they are due and a hard copy must be turned in at the beginning of class. All regular weekly writing assignments must be no more than 300 words and no longer than 1 single-spaced page. We will make extensive use of SafeAssignment. Be sure that SafeAssignment does not identify any of the main text of your your main final project assignments as duplicating work by others.
Integrity. This course will abide by the UM Honor Code: "On my honor, I have neither given nor received any aid on this paper." Review How to cite articles to avoid plagarism.
Honors. Honors credit is available and includes a more elaborate empirical and final project. Ask me.
Readings.
Readings are available on-line (click the indicated reading; they
are in Acrobat which can be downloaded
here). Some of these readings are from Lamb, M.
E., Bornstein, M. H., & Teti, D. M. (2002). Development in infancy: An
introduction (4th ed.). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates. (Called, "Development" below.) If a reading
assignment does not specify page numbers, the entire article is assigned. If
a reading assignment is marked as "Extra," it is not required.
Most lectures will be available from the links below and you can print
them out as PowerPoint handouts before class. |
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Writing (Writing Resources). All written assignments should be in complete sentences and use a terse style in which every word helps make your point. You should use the stylistic guidelines found in the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association which is in the library and the bookstore. These will be particularly important for citing references and preparing bibliographies when you are writing your article summary/critiques and your empirical research reports. Lateness Policy. All papers received after the class
period in which they are due but before the start of the next class will
receive a maximum of 50% credit. After this point, no credit will be given
for a late paper. If an emergency prevents you from handing in an
assignment on time, please provide me with documentation from a relevant
professional (Dr., ER, therapist, etc).
BlackBoard. Use BlackBoard to email all students in the class,
myself, and the Teaching Assistants simultaneously. In general, use
BlackBoard to ask and respond to questions about the reading, assignments,
whatever is relevant to what we are studying.
When you have a question for me that
might be helpful to others, email it to everyone and I will respond.
If
you send me an email which does not contain personal information, I will
forward it to the class. Participation in this class-wise email exchange is a
form of class participation and will count toward that segment of your grade.
I will not be able to accept any documents that contain computer
viruses. You will need to be able to
both send and receive emails from me. I will use this service for class-wide updates such as
revised instructions on assignments, and feedback on your work. To receive
these updates, you will need to have an email account that you regularly
check, which is registered with the University system. You can check this and
make changes at
MyUM or
BlackBoard (we are primarily using
BlackBoard for email communication and
posting assignments and an occasional lecture). |
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Date |
Session. Reading & Assignments Due |
Critical Questions (PowerPoint and questions for weekly
papers) |
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Choose
a preliminary (non-binding) final topic question from this syllabus (or
select one of your own) and hand in during class. |
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Tuesday, 8/28 |
Reading:
Final Project A. Select and read first final project article -and post citation (author, year, title, journal, volume, pages) of article to class along with your current version of your final topic question (see above for finding journals). (You can change your final project topic if you wish).
Extra:
Thompson, The Future of Children,
11(1), 20-33
Greenspan & Shanker (2004) (focus on first 2 pages and last 2
tables)
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. |
Defining development, prenatal
development, brain development
Define
development. Argue for why you believe development does or does not have an
endpoint.
Is it is all over after age 3?
What
is the take-home message of
Thursday's reading,
The Seductive Allure of Behavioral Epigenetics? |
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Thursday 8/30 |
Weekly Paper 1: Answer questions under, “Defining development, prenatal development, brain development” (one cell up & to right). Submit as hard copy and to BlackBoard.
Final. Your attachment ratings must be complete.
Reading: The Seductive Allure of Behavioral Epigenetics. Science.
Extra: Szyf, M. and J. Bick (2012). "DNA Methylation: A Mechanism for Embedding Early Life Experiences in the Genome." Child Development. Rutter, M. (2002). Nature, nurture, and development: From evangelism through science towards policy and practice. Child Development, 73, 1-21.
Eliot, Chap. 1.
Moffitt, T. E., Caspi, A., &
Rutter, M. (2006).
Measured
Gene-Environment Interactions in Psychopathology: Concepts, Research
Strategies, and Implications for research, intervention, and public understanding
of genetics. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 1(1), 5-27. |
Environmental and genetic interaction
What
are the advantages (name some forms of genetic transmission) and
disadvantages of thinking of genes as blueprints?
How
do environmental and genetic influences interact during prenatal development
(provide examples)? Other resources:
Http://www.erin.utoronto.ca/~w3bio380/ an embryology course |
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Tuesday 9/4 |
Final 1: Write out
your final project question. Summarize article. Indicate how first article
answers question. Indicate your next reading. (300 words).
Extra
Credit: Post baby picture to BlackBoard Reading: Adolph, K. E. (2008). Learning to move. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 17(3), 213-218.
Joh, A. S.* & Adolph, K. E. (2006). Learning from falling.
Child Development, 77, 89-102.
Lamb
et al. chapters 1 & 2 (pp. 1-56).
Adolph, K. E., S. R. Robinson, et al. (2008). "What is the shape of developmental change?" Psychological Review 115(3): 527-543.
Development,
chapter 3, (pp. 57-93) |
Physical growth and motor
development:
What
are the differences between individual and group growth curves?
and,
what is Couzin et al.'s
thesis?' |
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Thursday 9/6 |
Weekly 2.
Answer question under Physical
growth and development
and,
what is Couzin et al.'s
thesis?'
Reading: Couzin, J. (2002). Quirks of Fetal Environment Felt Decades Later. Science, 296(5576), 2167-2169.
Extra:
Landry, S. H., Smith, K.
E., Miller-Loncar, C. L., & Swank, P. R. (1997) . Predicting
cognitive-language and social growth curves from early maternal behaviors in
children at varying degrees of biological risk. Developmental Psychology,
33(6), 1040-1053. &
Bendersky, M., &
Lewis, M. (1994). Environmental risk, biological risk, and developmental
outcome. Developmental Psychology, 30(4), 484-494.
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Prematurity: Define prematurity.
What
factors predict the survival of premature infants
How
can prematurity be treated?
What
factors affect disability in the survivors? What types of disability and
other outcomes are likely in survivors?
How
are mortality and morbidity rates of premature infants changing?
If
a baby is born 8 weeks premature, how long after birth would you conduct a 52
week assessment, after correcting for prematurity?
How
do socioeconomic status (maternal education) and prematurity to influence
developmental outcome?
What
is the impact of variables such as
maternal sensitivity on outcome – on which infants do they have the greatest
impact?
What
interventions might improve the outcomes of premature infants (Kangaroo care,
other types of physical contact) – please describe.
How
do you think public health policy
should be structured to prevent negative developmental outcomes?
What
are the Fetal Origins of Adult Disease? |
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Tuesday, 9/11 |
Final
2: Write out your final project
question. Summarize article. Indicate how second article answers question.
Indicate your next reading. (300 words).
How to write your summary.
Reading:
Extra: Extra: Sood, B., V. Delaney-Black, et al. (2001). "Prenatal Alcohol Exposure and Childhood Behavior at Age 6 to 7 Years: I. Dose-Response Effect." Pediatrics 108(2): e34.
Singer et al article and accompanying editorial by Zuckerman et al.
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Exposure: What is Frank et al.'s
thesis about the current scientific literature (their major argument)?
Describe typical levels of medical and social risk (including other types of
exposure) in cocaine exposed children. Summarize findings from the Maternal
Lifestyle Study with respect to self-regulation and feeding behavior, at one
month, 4 month interaction, 18 month attachment, and Bayley mental, motor,
and behavioral development between 1 and three years. Describe the bolded
pathways leading 7-year behavior (CBCL) problems in Lester et al. (2009). Do
you see a potential problem with any of those pathways? Describe the impact
of prenatal alcohol exposure on childhood behavior in Sood et al. What is a
dose-response effect? |
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Thursday, 9/13 |
Weekly 3. Exposure and from Caspi, what does it mean that 'the child is father of the man'?'
Reading:
Caspi, 2000
Extra: Henderson, H. A., & Wachs, T. D. (2007). Temperament theory and the study of cognition-emotion interactions across development. Developmental Review, 27(3), 396-427. doi: 10.1016/j.dr.2007.06.004
Fox, N. A., & Henderson, H. A.
(1999). Does infancy
matter? Predicting social behavior from infant temperament. Infant
Behavior & Development, 22(4), 445-455.
See me for: Eliot 290-303 (neural basis of emotion) 316-321
(temperament).
Development
328-344.
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Temperament: What is temperament? CBQ, Labtab, Kagan &
Henderson videos |
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Tuesday
9/18 |
Final
3: Write
out your final project question. Indicate how previous articles answered
question (stating what was found in a total of 3-5 sentences), then indicate
how third article answers question (300 words total). Reference these
articles (APA) and put citations at end and indicate your next proposed
reading (this can be a second page).
Reading: Camras, L. A., & Shutter, J. M. (2010). Emotional facial expressions in infancy. Emotion Review, 2(2), 120-129. doi: 10.1177/1754073909352529 Extra: |
What are key tenets
(propositions) of discrete emotion theory?
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Thursday 9/20 |
Weekly 4: Discrete emotions (or Intensification) and What is the main point of, 'The eyes have it'?
Reading: Messinger, D.S., Mattson, W.I., Mahoor, M.H., & Cohn, J.F. (2012). The eyes have it: Making positive expressions more positive and negative expressions more negative. Emotion, 12(3), 430-436. PMID22148997.
Extra:
Messinger:
'Positive and negative' & 'Afterword
&
“Smiling”
Segal et al.
Facial expression site:
http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~face/index2.htm
Less Relevant examples: |
Intensification:
What evidence suggests that some smiles are more positive than others? What
evidence suggests that the same facial actions are associated with more
intense of stronger positive and negative emotions? What implications does
this have for discrete emotion theory and how we understand the link between
facial expression and emotion? Do infant
smiles express a single index of positive emotion or different emotional
qualities (like arousal)? What do portraits of facial
expressions in time tell us about emotion and what program creates them? What
do joystick ratings tell us about emotion and interaction? What evidence suggests infant
emotion is discrete what evidence suggests it is not?
–What evidence suggests that emotions
are not discrete and may be more dynamic and functional?
Extra:
What are the biological bases of emotion? Are there feelings before there is
a sense of self? What is emotion? Do facial expressions express emotions?
Does this change with age? What emotions exist at what ages? How does emotion
become regulated with age? |
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Tuesday 9/25 |
Final 4: Write out your final project question. Indicate how previous articles answered questions (stating what they found in a total of 3-5 sentences), then indicate how fourth article answers question (300 words). Reference these articles (APA) and put citations at end and indicate your next proposed reading.
Reading:
Mesman, J., M. H. van Ijzendoorn, et al. (2009). "The many faces of the Still-Face Paradigm: A review and meta-analysis." Developmental Review 29(2): 120-162. Extra: Messinger, D., Ruvolo, P., Ekas, N., & Fogel, A. (2010). Applying Machine Learning to Infant Interaction: The Development is in the Details. Neural Networks, Special Issue on Social Cognition: From Babies to Robots, 23(10), 1004–1016.NIHMS 234401.
Beebe
Schore, Ch. 6, Visual experiences and socioemotional development. Chimp coos: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8296464.stm Kaye, K., & Fogel, A. (1980). The temporal structure of face-to-face communication between mothers and infants. Developmental Psychology, 16(5), 454-464. Weinberg, K. M., & Tronick, E. Z. (1996). Infant affective reactions to the resumption of maternal interaction after the Still-Face. Child Development, 67(3), 905-914.
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Early interaction: Process (early_interaction.ppt)
Face-to-face
interaction and still-face: What does it mean that interaction is
bidirectional? How, specifically, do baby and parent influence each other? What does early interaction predict? How does conscience develop? What factors predict internalization of parental and cultural roles? Video A. Video B.
Timing early expressive behaviors: How do infants coordinate expressive actions in time and how does this change with age? What is an event-based approach? Which pairs of infant expressive behaviors are coordinated in time (facial expressions and vocalizations, facial expressions and gazes at a parent’s face, and/or vocalizations and gazes) and what does this suggest for the role of facial expressions? Indicate two patterns in which infant gazes and smiles are coordinated with mother smiles? How do all these patterns change with age? What does this suggest about infant-mother interaction? The issue of maternal psychopathology. Play in the toddler. Belsky & Most. Fogel scales. Empathy. |
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Weekly 5. Early interaction and... Reading.
Extra:
Baker, & Crnic (2009). Thinking about feelings: Emotion focus in the parenting of children with early developmental risk. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 53(5), 450-462. Baker J. K., Messinger, D.S., Lyons K.K., & Grantz, C.J. (2010). A Pilot Study of Maternal Sensitivity in the Context of Emergent Autism. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 40(8):988-999. NIHMS194102.
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Early Interaction: Prediction | ||||||
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Final 5: Write out your final project
question. Indicate how previous articles answered questions (stating what
they found in a total of 3-5 sentences), then indicate how fifth article
answers question (300 words). Reference these articles (APA) and put
citations at end and indicate/label your next proposed reading.
Reading:
Lamb et al. Development 371-393
Extra: http://pantheon.yale.edu/~kw77/HamlinWynnBloomNature2007.pdf
Erikson, E. (1950). Eight Ages of Man, Childhood
and Society (pp. 247-254): Norton.
Attachment site: http://johnbowlby.com
Follow
links for how to code the Strange Situation:
Overview of attachment classifications
(on p. 11) and coding. |
Attachment
defined: What are the levels of attachment organization? Attachment through the life
cycle: What predicts security and what security predicts Describing secure and insecure attachment: How is security of attachment assessed in the Strange Situation? Describe secure attachment and avoidant, anxious, and disorganized attachment? Use descriptions of strange situations observed in class to inform your paper. Weekly Questions for 10/4 (with points per question): What are the developmental stages of attachment? 10 What are the evolutionary functions of attachment? 10 Describe the attachment system.20 What are key attachment concepts and what evidence is there that monkeys evidence these concepts (review Harlow film)? 20 How is security of attachment assessed in the Strange Situation? 10 Describe secure attachment and avoidant, anxious, and disorganized attachment, referring to the videos we viewed. 30 |
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Wednesday Oct 3 |
Academic Alert Grades Due in myUM |
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Weekly 6: Weekly Questions for 10/4 Reading: Development 385-393
Extra: Raby, K. L., Cicchetti, D., Carlson, E. A., Cutuli, J. J., Englund, M. M., & Egeland, B. (2012). Genetic and Caregiving-Based Contributions to Infant Attachment. Psychological Science, 23(9), 1016-1023. doi: 10.1177/0956797612438265 van IJzendoorn, M. H., K. A. Bard, M. J. Bakermans-Kranenburg and K. Ivan (2009). Enhancement of attachment and cognitive development of young nursery-reared chimpanzees in responsive versus standard care, Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company. 51: 173-185.
Belsky, Jay; Houts, Renate M.; Fearon,
R. M. Pasco.
Infant attachment security and the timing of puberty:
Testing an evolutionary hypothesis.
Psychological Science,
Vol 21(9), Sep 2010, 1195-1201.
Extra:
Chimp
Attachment
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Predicting attachment security: What different roles might infant
temperament have in predicting security of attachment? |
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Tuesday 10 |
Final
6: Assignment: Register for and complete
www.citiprogram.org. See
Human Subjects Protection
for details. Reading:
|
What does secure attachment predict?
Describe the
stability (or instability) of attachment security as in infancy? |
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Thursday 10/11 |
Weekly 7:
Predicting
attachment security and What is the main point of the Van IJzendoorn
(1999)
article (below)?
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Workshop on empirical project: You will collect data
during this class session.
Extra.
Development:
What's infant development and how is it
studied? Define development,
and compare cross-sectional and longitudinal studies of development. Give
examples to back up your point. Indicate how these types of research methods
might address your preliminary final topic question.
Development
57-72. |
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Monday Oct 15 or Tuesday 10/16 |
Please
attend one (or both) showings of the movie "Babies" will be held next week.
The first will be on Monday, October 15th at 3:00 p.m. in Flipse, Room 402
and the second will be on Tuesday, October 16th at 4:00 p.m. in Flipse, Room
302. The movie is an hour and a half long. |
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Tuesday 10/16 (DG) |
18. Tuesday
3/24
Reading:
Final
7:
For your empirical project, what is your plan?
Indicate exactly what visits and procedures you will be looking at. Indicate
how you will code and graphically analyze (chart) your data. Indicate what
steps you will take to finish the project. |
Workshop on empirical project: You will collect data during
this class session.
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Thursday 10/18 |
Weekly 8: Describe the contexts of infant development in the movie, Babies.
Reading:
Extra:
NICHD_Early_Child_Care_Research_Network. (2006). Child-Care Effect Sizes for the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development. American Psychologist, 61(2), 99-116.
Tronick, E. Z., Morelli, G. A., & Ivey, P. K. (1992). The Efe forager infant and toddler's pattern of social relationships: Multiple and simultaneous. Developmental Psychology, 28(4), 568-577. Bornstein, M. H. and L. R. Cote (2003). "Cultural and parenting
cognitions in acculturating cultures: 2. Patterns of prediction and
structural coherence." Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology 34(3):
350-373. Messinger, D. & Freedman, D. (1992). Autonomy and interdependence in Japanese and American mother-toddler dyads. Early Development and Parenting, 1(1) 33-38. |
Cultural
Psychology. What is cultural psychology (give examples)?
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10/23 |
Final 8. Empirical project draft due.
Extra:
Carter, A. S., Messinger, D. S., Stone, W. L., Celimli, S., Nahmias, A. S., Yoder, P. (2011). A Randomized Control Trial of Hanen’s “More Than Words” in Toddlers With Early Autism. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 52(7), 741-52.
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Describe the
results of the Linda Ray intervention. Describe the IHDP project and its
major results at 3, 5, and 8 years. What is the animal model for early
intervention? Describe the major results of the Abecedarian project.How do
these results relate to those of the rat study? Argue for whether you think
early intervention works, how long it works, and for whom it works? Should
society devote resources to early intervention or later intervention? What
did Yoder and Stone find? Explain how this is a moderated effect. What other
autism intervention shows a moderated effect? Extra: Childcare Link. How is the quantity and quality of child care associated with peer competence? Specifically, how does experience in child-care settings impact observed skill in peer play? And, what impact does quality of child care have on socioemotional and peer outcomes? |
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Thursday 10/25 |
Final 9. Empirical project due. Weekly 9: Intervention questions and What is the main point of the Leavens et al. (2005) reading? Weekly 9 will count as extra credit.
Reading: Leavens, D. A.; Hopkins, W. D.; Bard, K. A. (2005). Understanding the Point of Chimpanzee Pointing: Epigenesis and Ecological Validity. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 14, 185-189.
Extra: Liszkowski, U., Schäfer, M., Carpenter, M., & Tomasello, M. (2009). Prelinguistic infants, but not chimpanzees, communicate about absent entities. Psychological Science, 20(5), 654-660.
Amanda Woodruff
Bakeman & Adamson, 2006, |
Gesture (give and take): Is
infant communication necessarily verbal?
What is the gestural advantage?
What is the evidence that gestures have different social approach &
instrumental functions?
Do they change with age differently?
Do they involve different expressive behaviors?
What are anticipatory smiles? Do they increase with age? What predicts them and what
are they predicted by? |
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Tuesday 10/30 DG |
Final 10. Project Outline: Write out your final project question. Outline of your final project integrating readings and outlining how you will answer your final project question. 300 words. A sentence here will correspond to a paragraph of the final paper. Reading: Ozonoff, S., Young, G., Carter, A.S., Messinger, D. , Yirmiya, N., Zwaigenbaum, L., Bryson, S. E., Carver, L., Constantino, J., Dobkins, K., Hutman, T., Iverson, J., Landa, R., Rogers, S., Sigman, M., Stone, W. (2011). Recurrence Risk for Autism Spectrum Disorders: A baby siblings research consortium study. Pediatrics. |
Autism and the broad autism phenotype[LINK PPT]
What
are the diagnostic criteria for autism and what are key characteristics of
children with autism?
Define
the concept of the broad phenotype and how it relates to the siblings of
children on the autism spectrum (“ASD sibs”).
Describe
recent findings on early attention, emotional communication, and joint
attention in “ASD sibs”
What
are communicative and other “red flag” deficits in the infant siblings
of children with autism spectrum disorder?
Describe
some current theories of autism
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Thursday 11/1
|
Weekly 10.
“Autism and
the broad autism phenotype” and What is the main point of Ibanez et al?
Reading: Ibanez, L., Grantz, C.J., Messinger, D.S. (2012). The development of referential communication and autism symptomatology in high-risk infants. Infancy, 1–21.
Extra: Development 279-285 & 296-327 Mundy, P. & Newell, L. (2007). Attention, joint attention and social cognition. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 16, 269-274. (The importance of joint attention to social cognition.)
Parlade, M. V., Messinger, D. S., van Hecke, A., Kaiser, M., Delgado, C., & Mundy, P. (2009). Anticipatory Smiling: Linking Early Affective Communication and Social Outcome. Infant Behavior & Development, 32, 33-43. (The meaning of initiating joint attention with a smile.)
Early behavioral intervention, brain plasticity,and the prevention of autism spectrum disorder. GERALDINE DAWSON. What are infant siblings teaching us about autism in infancy? Rogers, S. Baron-Cohen, S.; Belmonte, M. K. (2005). Autism: A Window Onto the Development of the Social and the Analytic Brain. Annual Review of Neuroscience, 28, 109-126.
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Gesture, Language, Autism, and Theory of Mind: What are infant initiated joint attention (IJA) and receptive joint attention (RJA)? How are they measured and what do they predict? How might early deficits in IJA associated with autism lead to more long-term deficits? What is theory of mind? How do autistic infants and infants with Down Syndrome differ?
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Tuesday 11/6
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Final 11: Draft of Poster as PowerPoint Handout
Reading: Werker, J. F., Yeung, H. H., & Yoshida, K. A. (2012). How Do Infants Become Experts at Native-Speech Perception? Current Directions in Psychological Science, 21(4), 221-226. doi: 10.1177/0963721412449459 Extra: Goldstein, M. H., & Schwade, J. A. (2008). Social Feedback to Infants' Babbling Facilitates Rapid Phonological Learning. Psychological Science, 19(5), 515-523. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02117.x
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Language overview: What is the
normative course of infant language development? How do infant cries
develop (directed and undirected)? What are the stages of development of
non-cry vocalizations? What are some early milestones of verbal development
(verbal development involves words)?
Statistical Learning. |
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Thursday 11/8 |
Weekly 11:
Language Extra. Electrophysiological Evidence for the Understanding of Maternal Speech by 9-Month-Old Infants Eugenio Parise and Gergely Csibra
Werker, J. F. (1989). Becoming a native
listener. American Scientist, 77.
Andrew
Lock. Preverbal communication. Chapter 14 of Bremner & Fogel. |
Language (individual differences):
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Tuesday 11/13
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Final 12. Poster as PowerPoint Handout. Print no more than 4 slides per page.
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Complete Language (individual differences):
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Thursday 11/15 |
Weekly 12:
Language |
Predicting and measuring
intelligence. Describe different
“developmental job descriptions” of early infancy
What is the main point of the visual cliff? |
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Tuesday 11/20
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Final 13. Post final version poster to BB and present poster in class. |
Poster Session.
Overview of
Poster and Presentation
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Thursday 11/22 |
THANKSGIVING | |||||||
Tuesday 11/27 |
Final 14. Post
presentation to BB by 7am. Presentation must be named with your name.
Example |
Oral presentations. Presentations will be 5 minutes and followed by questions. |
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Thursday 11/29
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Draft of your final paper.
Write
three questions for the final exam based on your PowerPoint presentation.
Your three questions should be central to your final question and each of the
three questions should refer to a specific slide or slides. |
Paper writing workshop. You must bring a draft of your final paper to class. |
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11/30 |
Final
Project Paper Due
Paper Example |
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12/6 |
8:00 - 10:30, Room 301 |
Final Exam. |
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Reading: S. Hrdy. Comes the Child before Man: How Cooperative Breeding and Prolonged Postweaning Dependence Shaped Human Potentials
Extra:
Lewis, M. (1999). Does infancy matter? Infant
Behavior & Development, 22(4), 413-414.
Kahlenberg, S. M., & Wrangham, R. W. Sex differences in chimpanzees' use of sticks as play objects resemble those of children. Current biology : CB, 20(24), R1067-R1068. |
Neonate:
Neonatal imitation, smiling, reflexes,
and feeding?Neonate:
What do studies of neonatal imitation indicate? Based on your observations,
can neonatal macaques imitate? What form do neonatal smiles have? Are they
due to gas? Are they a reflex? What is a reflex?
What are advantages of breast-feeding? What issues are relevant
to promoting breast-feeding?
What is the central issue in investigating the effects of
breast-feeding vs. bottle-feeding?
How
do infant and mother interact (influence each other) during feeding?
How is this and how is it
not interaction?
[How
do your observations of feeding relate to this topic?]
Discuss
the Brazelton exam and what it reveals about the individuality of neonates
(give examples from film).
Extra:
Sex differences. What infant sex differences are
described by Weinberg et al. find? How can biological factors and
differential social expectations influence sex differences?
Weinberg |
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Weekly 4:
Intervention Questions and What is
Sigman et al.'s main finding?
Extra:
Rovee-Collier, C. (1996).
Shifting the focus from what to why. Infant Behavior and Development, 19(4),
385-401.
[Infant in ecological niche at various developmental stages.]
Reading:
Development 205-223
Meltzoff. The case for a
developmental cognitive science: Theories of people and things. |
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Piaget and object
constancy: What are assimilation
and accomodation? How does Piaget believe that infants develop cognitively?
Provide examples from video. What does Piaget think about the development of
object constancy and the A-not-B error? What do Baillargeon's experiments
say about object constancy? What might account for differences increased
attention to violations of expectations regarding invisible objects but
their deficits in reaching for those objects? Provide examples from video.
Do you think infants can count? How is mental functioning assessed in
infancy?
Extra Reading:
The origins of intelligence in children
(pp. 331-337). New York: Norton.
Baillargeon, R. (2004).
Infants' physical world. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 13(3),
89-94.
Example
video.
Extra: Ahmed, A., &
Ruffman, T. (1998). Why do infants make A not B errors in a search task, yet
show memory for the location of hidden objects in a nonsearch task?
Developmental Psychology, 34(3), 441-453. |
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Extra session |
Extra Topics:
Perception