Psychology and Human Development
1.1 Psychology and Human Development
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Lifespan development studies the psychological processes behind growth, change, and stability across the entire human lifespan—from conception to death—by examining biological, cognitive, social, emotional, and personality domains to understand both universal patterns and individual differences.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What lifespan development studies: the psychological processes underlying growth, change, and stability in humans from womb to tomb, including transitions, maturation, and patterns across time.
- How it relates to psychology: lifespan development is a subfield of psychology (the scientific study of mind and behavior) that applies scientific methods to understand development across the entire lifespan.
- Multiple domains of development: development occurs across overlapping areas—biological/physical, cognitive, social, emotional, and personality—that influence one another.
- Common confusion—human development vs lifespan development: both study the same phenomena, but human development emphasizes a multidisciplinary approach incorporating anthropology, medicine, law, economics, and other fields, while lifespan development is rooted in psychology.
- Why it matters (application): developmental science translates research into evidence-based policies and interventions (e.g., teen driving restrictions based on peer influence research) to improve human life.
🔬 Defining the field
🔬 Psychology as the foundation
Psychology: the scientific study of the mind and all the behavior it produces.
- Psychology covers nearly the entire range of human experience, recognizing that the mind (located in the brain) is central to human functioning and the origin of all behavior.
- Behavior = physical, observable actions (e.g., riding a bike, texting).
- Affect = emotional experience, including feelings, moods, and understanding others' emotions.
- Cognition = all thinking abilities—memory, computation, imagination, language.
- Psychology bridges philosophy and science: founded in 1879 by Wilhelm Wundt to apply the scientific method to big questions philosophers had pondered for millennia (e.g., "Are humans fundamentally good or bad?" "Do early experiences dictate destiny?").
🌱 Lifespan development defined
Lifespan development: the scientific study of growth, change, and stability in humans and the processes that underlie that growth and change—from conception until death (womb to tomb).
- Also called developmental psychology (the terms are interchangeable).
- Growth often refers to maturation—biological changes (height, weight, physical characteristics) and psychological changes (vocabulary expansion, social skills).
- Change is non-linear and can occur in both directions.
- Stability = characteristics and abilities remain the same or function similarly across broad portions of the lifespan.
- Example: A shy child may show social inhibition as a teenager and adult, even choosing a behind-the-scenes career.
- Developmental psychologists look for patterns of stability and investigate the biological and psychological mechanisms that create consistency across time.
🌍 Human development perspective
Human development: a multidisciplinary approach to understanding the development process, incorporating theories and findings from anthropology, medicine, communications, history, economics, law, and other disciplines.
- Don't confuse: Human development departments may exist separately from psychology departments at universities.
- The main difference: human development emphasizes the broad scope of factors influencing development and uses as many tools, perspectives, and levels of analysis as possible.
- Contemporary study of growth, change, and stability has embraced this multidisciplinary perspective, whether called lifespan development or human development.
📜 Historical roots and evolution
📜 Origins before psychology
- Scientific inquiry into human development (especially children) pre-dates psychology's 1879 founding.
- Child study movement (1890s Progressive Era): united education, social work, and public policy to focus scientific interest on child development.
- One of the earliest published accounts: French physician Jean-Marc Gaspard Itard's case study of Victor, the "Wild Boy of Aveyron" (1802, 1821)—a boy who spent childhood without human contact.
- Itard's work explored fundamental questions that lifespan development still addresses today.
- Older roots trace back to ancient Greece (~400 BCE): Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and other philosophers were fascinated by the same questions contemporary developmental psychologists study.
🎯 Fundamental questions and application
Lifespan development asks several fundamental questions related to the passage of time:
- What changes we expect to see.
- When those changes occur during the lifespan.
- How they come about.
Application: the process of translating evidence-based research and ideas into practical solutions to influence and improve human life.
- Developmental psychology advocates for public policies and interventions based on scientific evidence.
- Example: Research showed that teenage reasoning abilities (risk assessment, reward-seeking) are heavily swayed by peers (Steinberg, 2014) → U.S. public policy agencies changed driving regulations to limit the number of non-familial teens in a car with a teenage driver.
- Professionals in medicine, education, public policy, senior care, social work, non-profits, and even toy design use developmental science findings in everyday life.
🧩 Domains of psychological development
🧩 Five overlapping areas
Development is studied across several major functional areas:
| Domain | What it includes |
|---|---|
| Biological/Physical | Growth, maturation, genetic blueprint unfolding, physical characteristics |
| Cognitive | Thinking skills, memory, language, computation, imagination |
| Social | Relationships, interactions, social skills, cultural expectations |
| Emotional | Affect, feelings, moods, emotional regulation |
| Personality | Temperament, consistent traits, individual differences |
- These areas overlap and influence one another (Figure 1.4 in the excerpt).
- Example: Eating disorders may be covered in physical/cognitive discussions, but also have clear social, emotional, and personality aspects.
- Don't confuse: The separation into domains is useful for organizing study, but there are many intersections across areas.
- Developmental psychology sometimes refers to social, personality, and emotional topics as "psychosocial" development to highlight overlap with cognition and mental processes.
🔗 Complexity of understanding individuals
- Emotional experiences, internal motivations, temperament, personality, and major thinking-skill domains all have developmental pathways while being shaped by one another.
- Adding biological growth and maturation (including each person's unique genetic blueprint unfolding over time) makes answering "Why is this person the way they are?" daunting.
- The domain approach helps manage this complexity by studying major functional areas while recognizing their interconnections.
💡 Application example: Money and happiness
💡 Does money buy happiness?
The excerpt uses the relationship between income and subjective well-being (personal sense of satisfaction and happiness) as an example of developmental science application.
Initial findings:
- Subjective well-being rises with income globally.
- Above roughly $90,000 USD per year, the relationship levels off—a certain amount of money satisfies wants and needs, but beyond that, earning more has diminishing influence.
Re-examination by emotional well-being level (Killingsworth et al., 2023):
| Emotional well-being level | Relationship between income and happiness |
|---|---|
| Low | Steady increase up to ~$100,000/year, then levels off |
| Medium | Direct, proportional relationship continues across entire income spectrum |
| High | Intensifying relationship after ~$100,000/year (happiness increases even more with higher earnings) |
💡 Other factors in subjective well-being
- Money is not the only factor related to happiness.
- Other factors: self-esteem, strong relationships, social support, sense of freedom, optimism.
- Throughout lifespan development, psychologists explore many psychological factors and processes that promote life satisfaction.