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Kathleen Stassen Berger Prepared by Madeleine Lacefield Tattoon, M.A. 1 Part II The First Two Years: Infant and Toddlers Chapter Five Body Changes Brain.

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Presentation on theme: "Kathleen Stassen Berger Prepared by Madeleine Lacefield Tattoon, M.A. 1 Part II The First Two Years: Infant and Toddlers Chapter Five Body Changes Brain."— Presentation transcript:

1 Kathleen Stassen Berger Prepared by Madeleine Lacefield Tattoon, M.A. 1 Part II The First Two Years: Infant and Toddlers Chapter Five Body Changes Brain Development Senses and Motor Skills Public Health Measures

2 2 “Adults don’t change much in a year or two. Their hair might grow longer, grayer, or thinner; they might be a little fatter; or they might learn something new. But if you saw friends you hadn’t seem for two years, you’d recognize them immediately.”

3 3 “By contrast, if you cared for newborn 24 hours a day for a month, went away for two years, and then came back,you might not recognized him or her, because the baby would have quadrupled in weight, grown taller by more than a foot, and sprouted a new head of hair. Behavior would have changed, too. Not much crying, but some laughter and fear—including of you.”

4 4 “A year or two is not much compared with the 75 or so years of the average life span. However, in two years newborns reach half their adult height, talk in sentences, and express almost every emotion—not just joy and fear but also love, jealousy, and shame.”

5 5 Biosocial Development

6 6 Body Changes –In infancy growth is fast neglect can be severe gain needs to be monitored health check-up need to include –height, weight and head circumference

7 7 Body Size rapid growth double their birth weight by the 4th month and triple by the 1st birthday physical growth slows in the 2nd year by 24 months weight is about 30 lbs, height about 32”-36” –these numbers are “norms”

8 8 Body Size “norms” –an average or standard for a particular population “particular population” –a representative sample of North American infants “percentiles” –a number that is midway between 0 and 100, with ½ the children above it and ½ below it

9 9 Body Size Weight increase in the early months is fat, providing insulation for warmth and nourishment Nourishment keeps the brain growing, if teething or illness interfere with eating When nutrition is temporarily inadequate, the body stops growing but not the brain –this is known as a phenomenon called “head-sparing”

10 10 Sleep Infants sleep about 17 hours or more a day Regular and ample sleep correlates with normal brain maturation, learning, emotional regulation, and psychological adjustment in school and within the family

11 11 Sleep Over the first month the amount of time spent in each type or stage of sleep changes Newborns dream a lot, or at least they have a high proportion of “REM sleep” –REM sleep rapid eye movement sleep is a stage of sleep characterized by flickering eyes behind closed lids, dreaming, and rapid brain waves

12 12 Sleep Sleep Patterns can be… –affected by birth order first born typically receive more attention –diet parents might respond to predawn cries with food, and/or play (babies learn to wake up night after night) –child-rearing practices “Where should infants sleep?” –co-sleeping or bed-sharing –brain maturation

13 13 Brain Development –the newborn’s skull is disproportionately large –large enough to hold the brain, which at birth is 25% of the adult brain –the neonate’s body is typically 5% of the adult weight –by age 2 the brain is almost 75% of the adult brain weight –the child’s total body weight is only about 20% of its adult weight

14 14 Basic Brain Structures Neurons are one of the billions of nerve cells in the central nervous system, especially the brain. Located in the brain or in the brain stem –the region that controls automatic responses, I.e., heartbeat, breathing, temperature, and arousal 70% of the neurons are in the cortex

15 15 Basic Brain Structures The cortex is crucial for humans… –80% of the human brain materials in the cortex –in other mammals the cortex is proportionally smaller, and non-mammals have no cortex –most thinking, feeling, and sensing take place in the cortex, although other parts of the brain join in.

16 16 Basic Brain Structures Areas of the cortex specialize in particular functions: –visual –auditory –an area dedicated to the sense of touch for each body part –regional specialization within the cortex occurs not only for motor skills and senses but also for aspects of cognition

17 17 Basic Brain Structures Between brain areas, neurons are connected to other neurons by intricate networks of nerve fibers called axons and dendrites –a neuron has a single axon and numerous dendrites, which spread out like the branches of a tree –axons and neurons meet the dendrites of other neurons at intersections called synapses which are critical communication links within the brain

18 18 Basic Brain Structures

19 19 Basic Brain Structures Transient Exuberance and Pruning –The fivefold increase in dendrites in the cortex occurs in the 24 months after birth, with about 100 trillion synapses being present at age 2 –The expanded growth is followed by pruning in which unused neurons and misconnected dendrites atrophy and die –Synapses, dendrites, and even neurons continue to form and die throughout life, though more rapidly in infancy than at any other time

20 20 Basic Brain Structures Experience Shapes the Brain –brain structure and growth depends on genes and experiences –some dendrites wither away because they are underused; no experiences have caused them to send a message to the axons of other neurons.

21 21 Basic Brain Structures Stress and the Brain –the role of experience in brain development begins when the brain produces cortisol and other hormones in response to stress, which happen throughout life

22 22 Basic Brain Structures Experience-expectant refers to brain functions that require certain basic common experiences, which an infant can be expected to have in order to develop normally Experience-dependent refers to brain functions that depend on particular, variable experience and that therefore may or may not develop in a particular infant

23 23 Basic Brain Structures –Basic, common experiences must happen for normal brain maturation to occur –in contrast, dependent experiences might happen. Because of them, one brain differs from another –experience varies; language babies hear or how their mothers reacts to frustration –all people are similar, but each person is unique, because of early experiences

24 24 Basic Brain Structures The last part of the brain to mature is the prefrontal cortex –The area for anticipation, planning, and impulse control –Virtually inactive in early infancy –Gradually becomes more efficient over the years of childhood and adolescence

25 25 Basic Brain Structures Implications for Caregivers –Early brain growth is rapid and reflects experience… caressing a newborn, talking to a preverbal infant showing affection –…are essential to develop that person’s full potential

26 26 Basic Brain Structures The human brain is designed to grow and adapt –some plasticity is retained throughout life –the brain protects itself from overstimulation –babies adjust to understimulation

27 27 Basic Brain Structures THINK LIKE A SCIENTIST –Plasticity and Orphans

28 28 Senses and Motor Skills Sensorimotor stage –cognition develops from the senses and motor skills –depends on sensory experiences and early movement within hours of birth vital organs are functioning, assessing basic senses and motor responses

29 29 Sensation and Perception –All the senses function at birth open eyes, sensitive ears, and responsive noses, tongues, and skin –Very young babies attend to everything Infants don’t focus on anything in particular To about age one taste is the primary way humans learn about objects

30 30 Sensation and Perception –Sensation is the response of a sensory system… eyes, ears, skin, tongue, nose –…when it detects a stimulus

31 31 Sensation and Perception –Perception is the mental processing of sensory information… the brain notices and processes a sensation… –when the brain interprets a sensation… –Infant’s brains are attuned to experiences that are repeated, striving to make sense of them

32 32 Senses and Motor Skills –Hearing Hearing is acute at birth Certain sounds trigger reflexes Sudden noises startle newborns Rhythmic sounds soothe them and put them to sleep

33 33 Senses and Motor Skills –Seeing At birth vision is the least mature The infant eyes are sensitive to bright light even though the eyes open in mid- pregnancy Newborns are “legally blind” they can only see objects 4” – 30” away

34 34 Senses and Motor Skills –Seeing At two months infants look more intensely at faces and often smile At three months infants look more closely at the eyes and mouth –The ability to focus the two eyes in a coordinated manner in order to see one image is known as binocular vision

35 35 Senses and Motor Skills –Tasting, Smelling and Touching

36 36 Senses and Motor Skills –Tasting, Smelling and Touching At birth the senses of taste, smell and touch function and rapidly adapt to the social world As infants learn their caregiver’s smell and touch (handling) they relax and cuddle Over time infants become responsive to whose touch it is and what it communicates

37 37 Senses and Motor Skills –Early sensation seems to have two goals: Social interaction –To respond to familiar caregivers Comfort –To be soothed amid the disturbances of infant life

38 38 Senses and Motor Skills –Motor Skill is the learned ability to move some part of the body, from a large leap to a flicker of the eyelid. (

39 39 Senses and Motor Skills –Newborns have many reflexes, some of which disappear with maturation (a reflex is an involuntary response to a particular stimulus

40 40 Senses and Motor Skills –Reflexes three sets are critical for survival –that maintain oxygen supply –that maintain constant body temperature –that manage feeding

41 41 Senses and Motor Skills –Gross Motor Skills are physical abilities involving large body movements (gross meaning “big”) walking jumping –Walking progress from reflexive, to hesitant to adult-supported stepping to a smooth coordinated gait

42 42 Senses and Motor Skills –Gross Motor Skills Three factors combine to allow toddlers to walk –muscle strength –brain maturation within the motor cortex –practices

43 43 Senses and Motor Skills –Fine Motor Skills are physical abilities involving small body movements, especially of the hands and fingers (fine in this text means “small”) drawing picking up a coin

44 44 Senses and Motor Skills Ethnic Variation –healthy infants develop skills in the same sequence –they vary in the age at which they acquire them

45 45 Senses and Motor Skills

46 46 Senses and Motor Skills –Genes are only a small part of most ethnic differences –Cultural patterns of child rearing can affect sensation, perception, and motor skills

47 47 Public Health Measures –8 billion children were born between 1950 – 2005 –2 billion died before age 5 Deaths could be twice this if not for: –Child care –Preventive care – immunization –Clean water –Adequate nutrition –Medial treatment, etc.

48 48 Public Health Measures Immunization is a process that stimulates the body’s immune system to defend against attack by a particular contagious disease (immunization acquired either naturally, by having the disease or though vaccination)

49 49 Public Health Measures Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) –die unexpectedly in their sleep –No apparent cause of death –1990 in the U.S., 5000 babies died of SIDS, 1 in 800

50 50 ISSUES AND APPLICATONS Back to Sleep

51 51 Nutrition Breast is Best –Good nutrition starts with mother’s milk Colostrum, a thick, high-calorie fluid secreted by the woman’s breast at the birth of a child. About 3 days later the breast begins to produce milk Breast fed babies are less likely to get sick

52 52 Nutrition Malnutrition –protein-calorie malnutrition is a condition in which a person does not consume sufficient food of any kind –the deprivation can result in several illnesses, severe weight loss, and sometimes death –to measure a child’s nutritional status, compare weight and height with the "norms"


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