definition of developmental psychology
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By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
Presented byMasood Ahmed
Shaheen DhananiNaureen Nizamuddin
Arsela MehmoodKawnal Dawoodi
Atif AhmedAsim Naseem John
Arbab Khan
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Last Updated: April 8, 2023
By: Radiology Students
By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
Presented by Developmental psychology, also known as human development, is the scientific study of progressive psychological changes that occur in human beings as they age. Originally concerned with infants and children, the field has expanded to include adolescence and more recently, aging, and the entire life span. .
Definition of Developmental Psychology
Last Updated: April 8, 2023
By: Radiology Students
By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
Presented by
•The period of time in your life after your physical growth has stopped and fully developed. •Developmental changes continue throughout adulthood: not a single phase of life•Taking on adult responsibilities in work and social relationships•Challenges: love, work, play continue changing
Adulthood
By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
Presented by
• Growth and strength in early adulthood, then slow process of decline afterwards
• Speed and endurance• Vision and ability to see in
weak lighting• Hearing and detection of
tones• Taste – intact until later in
life; men tend to lose hearing and taste earlier than women
• Decline affected by health and lifestyles
Physical Development
By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
Presented by •Continues throughout adulthood; some abilities improve while others decline
•Fluid intelligence peaks in 20s, declines thereafter •Crystallized intelligence improves until 30s; then declines slowly afterwards.
Cognitive Development
By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
Presented by•Many aspects of personality are fairly stable over time, and changes are predictable
•On average, adults become •less anxious and emotional, socially outgoing, and creative
•People become more dependable, agreeable, and accepting of life’s hardships
•Much disagreement about when and how changes occur during aging – differences between stages of infant/child development and adult development
•Not all adults go through every stage•Order of stages can vary for individuals•Timing of stages not controlled by biological maturation.
Emotional and Social Development
By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
Presented by
Early Stage Adulthood
Isolation• Loneliness, self-absorption.
• Hesitate to form close ties.
• Fear of losing identity.
Intimacy• Making a permanentcommitment to a lifePartner.• Other close relationships:friends, work.• Involves giving up somenewfound independence,redefining identity.
Erikson’s Theory:
Intimacy versus Isolation
By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
Presented by
Stages of Adult life
Erikson’s Theory: Intimacy vs. Isolation 18s
Generativity vs. Stagnation Adulthood
Integrity vs. Despair Old age
By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
Presented by
Middle Stage Adulthood
GenerativityTaking stock of what one has, who s/he isSome are happy, some are disappointed.
The alternative is self-absorption and stagnation, where the person feels that his or her own life is the only thing that matters.
Erikson’s Theory:
Generativity versus stagnation (40-65 years)
Stagnation /Self Absorption
By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
Presented by Despair
satisfying existence or merely staying alive.
Later Stage Adulthood
IntegrityLooks back over life as a whole:
Erikson’s Theory:Integrity versus Despair(65years onwards)
By: Radiology Students
Physical Development
Cognitive DevelopmentEmotional and Social Development
Stages of Adult Life
Adulthood
Development Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Early Stage Adulthood
Middle Stage Adulthood
Later Stage of Adulthood
Thanks
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