Saturday, May 16, 2015

AP Macroeconomics Unit 7: Balance of Payments

The Balance of Payments

o   A nation’s balance of payments is the measure of money inflows and outflows between the U.S. and the rest of the world.
inflows: credits outflows:debits

  • BOP is divided into 3 separate accounts: Current, Capital, Official Resserves


o   Three Components
 The Current Account
·         The current account summarizes U.S. trade in currently produced goods and services
·         US Exports have a plus (+) sign – they creditand create revenue
·         US Imports have a minus (-) sign – they aredebit and reduce the stock of foreign currencies in the United States
·         Balance on Goods
o   A country’s balance of trade on goods is the difference between its exports and its imports of goods
·         Balance on Services
o   Services include insurance, consulting, travel, and brokerage services
·         Balance on Goods & Services
o   The difference between U.S. exports of goods and services and U.S. imports of goods and services
§  Trade deficit – imports > exports
§  Trade surplus – exports > imports
·         Balance on Current Account
o   Represents the net investment income, represents the difference between
§  1. The interest and dividend payments foreigners paid the United States for the use of exported U.S. capital
§  2. The interest and dividends the United States paid for the use of foreign capital invested in the United States
o   Includes Net transfers and Net investment Income
§  Net Transfers include foreign aid, pensions paid to U.S. citizens living abroad, and remittances by immigrants to relatives abroad
·         “The exporting of goodwill and the importing of ‘thank-you notes’.”
o   By adding all transactions in the current account, obtain the balance on current account
§  The Capital Account
·         The capital account summarizes the purchase or sale of real or financial assets and the corresponding flows of monetary payments that accompany them.
o   Items (an office building or bonds) bought from the U.S. count as exports (+) as they represent in--payments of foreign currencies
§  Key Point – foreign purchases of assets in the U.S.
o   Items located in foreign countries and sold to companies in that country count as imports (-) as they represent out-payments of domestic currencies
§  Key Point- U.S. purchases of assets abroad
·         Exports and Imports balance on the balance on capital account
§  The Official Reserves Account
·         The central banks of nations hold quantities of foreign currencies called official reserves.
·         Functions just the same as reserves in any other bank
·         Basically used to make up any final balancing amount

§  The three components of the balance of payments (the current account, the capital account, and the official reserves account) must together equal zero.
§  Every unit of foreign exchange used (as reflected in a minus out-payment or debit transaction) must have source (a plus in-payment or credit transaction)
o   Payments Deficits and Surpluses
§  Balance-of-payments deficits and surpluses, though the balance of payments must always sum to zero, this refers to imbalances between the current and capital accounts
·         The US favors balance-of-payments deficits – a drawing down of official reserves


·         A balance-of-payments surplus is a building up of official reserves
A BOB "Chart"

Assets/Creditr (Inflow)
Debits/Liabilities (Outflow)
Current Account


-Balance on goods and services
-Net exports
-Balance of trade
-Exports
-Tourism here
-Imports
-Tourism there
Net Investments
-Interest/dividend payments
-Foreign ppay to U.S. for use of exported capital
-Interest/dividend payments
-The U.S. made for the use foreign capital invested in U.S.
Net Transfers
-Aid to U.S.
-Include royalties
-Aid to their country
-Their royalties
Financial Account
-Capital inflows
-Direct investment by foreigners
-Purchases of stocks and bonds by foreigners
-Capital ooutflows
-Direct investment by U.S. over there
-Purchases of stocks and bonds by U.S.
Official Reserves
-Currencies
-Gold
-IMF
-Currencies
-Gold
-IMF

Comparative and Absolute Advantage

  • The division of labor into specific task and roles intended to increase the productivity of workers is called known specialization
  • Globalization is the process of increasing the productivity and interdependence of the world's markets and businesses
  • Absolute advantage refers to a country's ability to produce a certain more of a good or service than another country
  • The absolute advantage rule states that two countries should specialize and trade when each other partner has an output advantage over the other
  • Comparative advantage refers to a country's ability to produce a particular good with a lower opportunity cost than another country
  • Gains from trade or based on comparative advantage, not absolute advantage
  • Comparative advantage is the basis for all trade between individuals, regions, and nations
The Foreign Exchange Market
  • A foreign exchange market is a market in which currencies are exchanged for one another
  • The equilibrium prices in these markets are called exchange rates
  • The rate at which the currency of one nation can be exchanged for the currency of another nation
  • Depreciation and Appreciation: an increase in the U.S. demand for Japanese goods will increase the demand for yen and raise the dollar price of yen


Supply of the Dollar
Demand of the Dollar
-Comes from U.S. citizens, banks, and industries wanting to purchase foreign goods, investments assets and to make payments to transfer foreigners
-Comes from foreigners, banks, and industries wanting to purchase our goods, investments, assets, and to make transferred payments to U.S.

  • 5 Determinants of Supply and Demand in Foreign Exchange Market
  1. Change in buyers taste
  2. Change in relative incomes
  3. Change in relative prices
  4. Change in interest rates
  5. Change in expectations
Exchange Currencies
  • Sell exports and buy imports
  • Invest in a countries stocks and bonds
  • Build stores and factories in other markets
  • Hold currencies in bank accounts for future exports, imports, and business loans 
  • To speculate on currency values








AP Psychology Unit 6

Unit 6

Memory
The persistence of learning over time through the storage and retrieval of information

Memory Process

  1. Encoding: the processing of information into the memory 
  2. Storage: the retention of encoded material over time
  3. Retrieval: the process of getting the information of memory storage
Recall vs. Recognition
  • With recall you must retrieve the information from your memory (fill-in-the blank test)
  • With recognition you must identify the target from possible targets (multiple choice test)
Flashbulb Memory

  • A clear moment of an emotionally significant moment or event
3 Types of Memory
Sensory Memory

  • The immediate, initial recording of sensory information in the memory system 
  • Store just for an instant, and most gets unprocessed
Short-term Memory

  • Memory that holds a few items briefly
  • Seven digits
  • The information will be stored into long-term of forgotten
Working Memory (Modern Day STM)

  • Another way of describing the use to short-term memory is called working memory
  • Has three parts: 
  1. Audio
  2. Visual
  3. Integration of audio and visual
Long-term Memory 

  • The relatively permanent and limited storehouse of the memory system
Encoding
Automatic Processing

  • Unconscious encoding of incidental information
  • You encode space, time and word meaning without effect
  • Things can become automatic with practice
Effortful Processing

  • Encoding that requires attention and conscious effort
  • Rehearsal is the most common effortful processing technique
  • Through enough rehearsal, what was effortful becomes automatic
The Next-in-line Effect

  • We seldom remember what the person has just said or done if we are next
Spacing Effect

  • We encode better when we study or practice over time 
Serial Positioning Effect 

  • Our tendency to recall best the last and first items in a list
Three Types of Encoding

  1. Semantic: the encoding of meaning, like the meaning of words
  2. Acoustic: the encoding of sound, especially the sounds of words
  3. Visual: the encoding of picture images
Chuncking

  • The organizing items into familiar, manageable units
  • Often it will occur automatically
Token Economy

  • Every time a desires behavior is performed a token is given
  • They can trade tokens in for a variety of prizes 
  • Used in homes, prisons, mental institutions, and schools
Fixed Interval

  • Requires a set of amount of time to elapse before giving the reinforcement
Variable Interval

  • Requires a random amount of time to elapse before giving the reinforcement
Observational Learning 

  • Albert Bandura and Bobo Doll 
  • We learn through modeling behavior from others 
  • Observational learning plus operant conditioning equals social learning theory
Latent Learning 

  • Sometimes learning is not immediately evident
Insight Learning 

  • Some animals through the "ah ha" experience
Reinforcement 

  • Reduce or decrease a desired behavior 
Punishment 

  • Used to decrease an unwanted behavior
Types of Long Term Memory
Explicit (declarative) with conscious recall

  • Facts, general knowledge (semantic memory)
  • Personally experienced events (episodic memory)
Implicit (nondeclarative) with conscious recall

  • Skills, motor and cognitive
  • Classical and operate conditioning effect
Types of Retrieval Failure 
  1. Proactive Interference: the disruptive effect f prior learning on the recall of new information
  2. Retroactive Interference: the disruptive effect of new learning on the recall of old information
Misinformation Effect
  • Incorporating misleading information into ones memory of an event
Learning 

Associative Learning
  • Learning that certain events occur together
Classical Conditioning
  • Ivan Pavlov, tested theory on dogs
Unconditional Stimulus (UCS)
  • A stimulus that naturally and automatically triggers response
Unconditioned Response (UCR) 
  • The unleamed, naturally occurring response the UCS
Conditioned Stimulus (CS)
  • An originally irrelevant stimulus, that, after association with the UCS, comes to trigger response
Conditioned response (CR)
  • The learned response to a previously neutral stimulus
Acquisition
  • The phase where the neutral stimulus is associated with the UCS so that the neutral stimulus comes to elicit the CR
Extinction
  • The diminishing of a conditional response 
  • Will eventually happen when the UCS does not follow the CS
Spontaneous Recovery 
  • The reappearance, after a rest period of an extinguished conditioned response 
Generalization
  • The tendency, once a response has been conditioned, for stimuli similar to the CS to elicit similar response
Discrimination
  • The ability to distinguish between a CS and other stimuli that does not signal UCS 
Operant Conditioning 
  • The learner is not passive
  • Learning based on consequences 
  • A type of learning in which behavior sis strengthened if followed by reinforcement or diminished if followed by punishment 
Classical vs. Operant 
  • They both use acquisition, discrimination, SR, generalization and extinction
  • Classical conditioning is automatic
  • Operant conditioning involves behavior where one can influence their environment with behaviors which have consequences 
Law of Efferent by Edward Thorndike
  • rewarded behavior is likely to reoccur
B.F. Skinner
  • Shaping: a procedure in operant conditioning in which reinforcers guide behavior closer and closer towards a foal
Reinforcers
  • Any event that strengthens the behavior it follows
  • Two types of reinforcement
  1. Positive
  2. Negative
Positive Reinforcement 
  • Strengthens a response by presenting a stimulus after a response
Negative Reinforcement
  • Strengthens a response by reducing or removing an aversive stimulus
Types of Reinforcers
Primary Reinforcers
  • An innately reinforcing stimulus 
Conditioned (Secondary) Reinforcer
  • A stimulus that gains its reinforcing power through its association within its primary reinforcement
Punishment 
  • An event that decreases the behavior that it follows
Reinforcement Schedules 
Continuous Reinforcement 
  • Reinforcing the desired response every time it occurs
Partial Reinforcement 
  • Reinforcing a response only part of the time 
  • The acquisition process is slower
  • Greater resistance to extinction 
Fixed Ratio Schedule
  • A schedule that reinforces a response only after a specified number of responses
Variable Ratio Schedule 
  • A schedule of reinforcement that reinforces a response after an unpredictable number of responses
Fixed Interval
  • A schedule of reinforcement that reinforces a response only after a specified time as elapsed
 Variable Interval Schedule 
  • A schedule of reinforcement that reinforces a response at unpredictable intervals
Sleep
  • State of unconscious 
  • We are less aware of our surroundings 
Conscious, Subconscious, Unconscious
Daydream
  • They can help us prepare for future events
  • They can nourish our social development 
  • Can substitute for impulsive behavior 
Fantasy Prone Personalities
  • Someone who imagines and recalls experiences with life like vividness and who spends considerable time fantasizing 
Biological Rhythms 
  • Annual cycle: seasonal variation (bear hibernation)
  • 28 Day cycle: sleep cycle
  • 24 Hour cycle: our circulation rhythm 
  • 90 Minute cycle: sleep cycle
Circadian Rhythm 
  • Biological clock
  • Our body temperature and awareness changes throughout the day
Sleep Stage 

  • There are 5 identified stages
  • It takes about 90-100 minutes to pass through the five stages
  • The brain's waves will change according to the sleep stage you are in
  • The first four stages are known as NREM sleep
  • The 5th stage is called REM sleep
First Stage
  • Kind of awake and kind of asleep 
  • Only last a few minutes, and you usually only experience it once a night
  • Eyes begin produces theta waves
Second Stage
  • This follows stage one of sleep and is the "baseline" of sleep
  • This stage is part of the 90 minute cycle and occupies approximately 45-60 % of sleep
  • More theta waves that progressively slower 
Stage Three and Four
  • Slow wave sleep
  • You produce delta waves
  • If awoken you will be very groggy
  • Vital for restoring body's growth hormones and overall health 
  • May last 15-30
  • It is called "slow wave" sleep because brain activity slows down dramatically from the "theta" rhythm of stage two to a much slower rhythm called "delta" and the height or amplitude of the waves increases dramatically 
  • Contrary to popular belief, it is delta sleep that is the "deepest" stage of sleep and the most restorative
  • It is delta sleep that asleep-deprives person's brain craves the first and foremost
REM Sleep
  • Rapid eye movement
  • Brain is very active 
  • Dreams occur
  • Body is essentially paralyzed
  • 20-25 % of normal nights sleep
  • Breathing, heart rate, and brain wave activity quickens
  • Vivid dreams can occur
  • From REM, you back to stage two
Insomnia 
    • Persistent problems falling asleep
    • Affects 10% of the population
    Narcolepsy
    • Suffer from sleeplessness and may fall asleep at unpredictable or inappropriate times
    • Directly into REM sleep
    • Less than .001% of population
    Sleep Apnea
    • Wake up momentarily, gasps for air, the  falls back asleep
    • Very common, especially in heavy males
    • Can be fatal
    Night Terrors
    • A sleep disorder characterized by high arousal and an appearance of being terrified
    • Occurs in stage four, not REM, are not often remembered
    Sleep Walking
    • Sleep disorder affecting an estimated 10 percent of all humans at least once in their lives
    • Most often occurs during deep non-REM sleep (stage 3 or stage 4 sleep) early in the night
    Dreams 
    • A sequence of images, emotions, and thoughts passing through a sleeping person's mind
    • Manifest Content: the remembered story line of a dream
    • Latent Content: the underlying meaning of a dream 
    Three Theories 
    Freud's Wish-Fulfillment Theory
    • Dreams are the key to understanding our inner conflict
    • Ideas and thoughts that are hidden in our unconscious 
    • Manifest and latent content
    Information Processing Theory 
    • Dreams act to sort out and understand the memories that you experience that day 
    • REM sleep does increase after stressful events
    Activation-Synthesis Theory
    • During the night out brain stem releases random neural activity, dreams may be a way to make sense of that activity

    Wednesday, April 1, 2015

    Unit 4 Psychology






    The Nervous System

    It starts with an individual nerve cell called a Neuron.
    How does a Neuron Fire?

    Resting Potential: Slightly negative charge; reaches the threshold when there enough of a transmitter reaches. 
    Dendrites: Go to Action Firing. 

    The All or None Response: The idea that either the neuron fires or it does not- no part way firing.
    Like a gun
    Steps of Action Potential

    Neurotransmitters: Chemical messengers that are released by terminal buttons through the synapse

    4 Types:
    Acetylcholine (ACH)
    - Deals with motor movement and memory
    - Lack of ACH has been linked to Alzheimer’s disease
    Dopamine
    - Deals with motor movement and alertness
    - Lack of Dopamine has been linked to Parkinson’s disease
    - Too much has been linked to Schizophrenia 
    Serotonin
    - Involved in mood control
    - Lack of Serotonin  has been linked to clinical depression 
    Endorphins
    - Involved in pain control 
    - Many of our addictive drugs deals with Endorphins. 
    Drugs can be:
    Agonist- Make Neuron Fire
    Antagonist- Stop Neural Firing 
    Reuptake Inhibitors- Block neurotransmitters from entering the Neuron
    Norepinephrine
    - Helps control alertness and arousal
    - An undersupply can lead to depression
    - An oversupply can lead to manic symptoms 
    GABA (Gamma- Aminobutytic Acid)
    - Major inhibitory neurotransmitter
    - An undersupply can lead to tremors, seizures, and insomnia
    Glutamate
    - Major excitatory neurotransmitter
    - Involved in memory
    - An oversupply can overstimulate the brain, leading to migraines (this is why people avoid food with MSG in it)


    Types of Neurons 

    Afferent Neurons
    Sensory Neurons: Take information from the senses to the brain
    Inter Neurons: Take messages form Sensory Neurons to other parts of the brain or to Motor Neurons

    Efferent Neurons
    Motor Neurons: Take information from brain to the rest of the body

    Neuro Anatomy

    Synapse: Apace in between; Neurons do not touch each other 
    Neurotransmitters: Chemicals held in the terminal buttons that travel through synaptic gap
    Dendrites: Receive messages from other cells
    Axon: Passes messages away from the cell body to other neurons or muscles
    Neural Impulse: Electrical signal traveling down the axon 
    Myelin Sheath: Covers the axon, where neural impulse travels
    Terminal branches of Axon: form junctions with other cells
    Cell body: the cell’s life, support center



    The Nervous System

    Central Nervous System
    Consists of Brain and Spinal Cord
    Peripheral Nervous System 
    All nerves that are not encase in bone
    Everything but the Brain and Spinal Cord
    Divided into two: Somatic and Autonomic
    Somatic:
    - Controls voluntary muscle movements
    - Uses motor (Efferent) Neuron
    Autonomic:
    - Controls the automatic functions of the body
    - Divided into two categories: Sympathetic or Parasympathetic 
    Sympathetic:
    - Fight or Flight Response
    - Automatically accelerate heart rate, breathing, dilates pupils, slow down digestion 
    Parasympathetic:
    - Automatically slows the body down after a stressful events
    - Heart rate and breathing slow down, pupils constrict and digestion speeds up
    Reflexes
    Normally, sensory (Afferent) neurons take information up through the spine to the brain
    Some reactions occur when sensory neurons reach just the spinal chord












    The Endocrine System: The Major Endocrine Glands


    A system of glands that secrete hormones
    Similar to nervous system, except hormones work a lot slower than neurotransmitters

    Way We Study the Brain

    Accidents
    Phineas Gage Story
    Personality changed after the accident

    Lesions
    Removal of destruction of some part pf the brain
    Frontal Lobotomy

    Electro Encephalogram
    EEG
    Detects brain waves through their electrical output
    Used mainly in sleep research

    Computerized Axial Tomography 
    CAT scan 
    3D x-ray of the brain
    Tumor locating, but nothing about the function

    Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    MRI
    More detailed picture of brain using magnetic field to knock electrons off axis
    Like a movie production

    Position Emission Tomography
    PET scan
    Measures how much of a chemical the brain is using (usually glucose consumption)

    Brain Structures:
    1. Hindbrain
    2. Midbrain
    3. Forebrain



    Hindbrain
    Structures on top of our spinal chord
    Control basic biological structure

    Medulla Oblongata
    - Located just above the spinal chord
    - Controls:
    Heart rate
    Blood pressure
    Breathing

    Pons
    - Located just above the Medulla 
    - Connects Hindbrain with Midbrain and Forebrain
    - Involved in expressions

    Cerebellum
    - Bottom rear of the brain
    - Means “Little Brain”
    - Coordinates fine muscle movements

    Midbrain
    Coordinates simple movements with sensory information
    Most important structures in Midbrain is the Reticular Formation (Reticular Activating System) controls arousal and ability to focus our attention
    If broken… sleep

    Forebrain
    Makes us human
    Largest part of the brain
    Made up of the Thalamus, Limbic System and Cerebral Cortex
    Thalamus
    - Switchboard of the brain 
    - Receives sensory signals from the spinal cord and sends them to other parts of the Forebrain 
    - Every sense except smell


    Limbic System 
    - Hypothalamus, Hippocampus, Amygdala








    Hypothalamus
    - Maybe most important structure in the brain 
    - Controls: 
    Body Temperature
    Sexual Arousal
    Hunger
    Thirst
    Endocrine System

    Hippocampus
    -  Involved in the processing and storage of memories 

    Amygdala
    - Involved in how we process memory
    - More involved in volatile emotions like anger



    The Cerebral Cortex is made up of four lobes



    ·         Frontal Lobes
    -          Abstract thought and emotional control.
    -          Contains the Motor Cortex: Sends signals to our body controlling muscle movements.
    -          Contains Broca’s Area: Responsible for controlling muscles that produce speech.
    -          Damage to Broca’s Area is called Broca’s Aphasia: Unable to make movements to talk.
    ·         Motor and Sensory Cortexes




    ·         Parietal Lobes
    -          Contains Sensory Cortex: Receives incoming touch sensations from the rest of the body.
    -          Most of the Parietal Lobes are made up of Association Areas.
    -          Association Area: Any area not associated with receiving sensory information or coordinating muscle movements.
    ·         Occipital Lobe
    -          Deals with vision
    -          Contains Vision Cortex: Interprets messages from our eyes into images we can understand.
    ·         Temporal Lobes
    -          Process sound sensed by our ears.
    -          Interpreted in Auditory Cortex.
    -          NOT LATERALIZED
    -          Contains Wernicke’s Area: Interprets written and spoken speech.
    -          Wernicke’s Aphasia: Unable to understand language; the syntax and grammar is jumbled.
    -          Specialization and integration in language



    ·         Corpus Callosum: Connects right and left hemispheres. 





    Developmental Psychology
    • The study of you from womb to the tomb 
    • How we change physically, socially, cognitively and morally
    Nature vs. Nurture
    • Nurture: the way you were raised
    • Nature: the way you were born
    Prenatal Development
    • Conception begins with the drop of an egg and the release of about 200 million sperm
    • The sperm seeks out the egg and attempts to penetrate the eggs surface
    Zygote
    • The first stage of prenatal development, last about two weeks and consists of rapid cell division
    • Sperm penetrates egg, it is now fertilized
    • Less than half of all zygotes survive first two weeks
    • About 10 days after conception, the zygote will attach itself to the uterine wall 
    • The outer part of the zygote becomes the placenta (nutrients)
      Embryo
      • Two weeks later 
      • Last about 6 weeks
      • Heart begins to beat and the organs begin to develop
        Fetus
        • By nine weeks we have a fetus
        • The fetus by about the 6th month, the stomach and other organs have formed enough to survive outside of mother
        • At this time the baby can hear (and recognize) sounds and respond to light
          Teratogens
          • Chemical agents that can harm the prenatal environment
          • Alcohol
          • Other STD's can have the baby
          • HIV
          • Herpes
          Healthy Newborns
          • Turn head towards voices
          • See 8 to 12 inches from their faces 
          • Gaze longer at human like objects right from birth
          Reflexes
          • Inborn automatic responses
          • Rooting reflexes: babies tendency when touched on the cheek to open mouth and search for nipple
          • Sucking 
          • Grasping 
          • Moro
          • Babinski
          Maturation
          • Physical growth, regardless of the environment
          • Although the timing
          Puberty
          • The period of sexual maturation, during which a person becomes capable of reproducing
          Primary Sexual Characteristics
          • Body structures that make reproduction possible
          Secondary Sexual Characteristics
          • Non-reproductive sexual characteristics
          Landmarks for Puberty
          • Menarche for girls
          • First ejaculation for boys (spermarche)
          Physical Milestones
          • Menopause: when a woman stops menstruation
          Death
          • Elizabeth Kubler-Ross
          • Stages of Death/Grief
          1. Denial
          2. Anger 
          3. Bargaining
          4. Depression
          5. Acceptance
          Social Development 
          • Stranger anxiety: when an infant encounters a stranger and exhibit anxiety
          • Separation anxiety: when a child is separated from their parents
          Attachment
          • Harry Harlow and his monkeys
          • Harry showed that monkeys needed touch to form attachment 
          • Critical periods: the optimal period shortly after birth when organism's exposure to certain stimuli or experiences produce proper development
          • Those who are deprived of touch have trouble forming attachment when they are older
          Mary Ainsworth's strange situation
          Types of Attachment
            1. Secure
            2. Avoidant
            3. Ancious/Ambivalent
            Parenting Styles
            1. Authoritarian (parent in control)
            2. Permissive Parents (child in control)
            3. Authoritative Parents (both child and parent)
            Erik Erikson-Social Development
            • A neon-Freudin
            • Worked with Anna Freud
            • Thought our personality was influenced by our experiences with others
            Trust vs. Mistrust
            • Can a baby trust you 
            • The trust or mistrust they develop can carry on with the child
            Autonomy vs. Shame&Doubt
            • Babies control bodies (toilet)
            • Control temper tantrums
            • Big word is "No"
            Initiative vs. Guilt 
            • Word "No" turns to "Why?"
            • Are they good or bad
            • Ages 3-6
            • Want to understand the world and ask questions
            Industry vs. Inferiority
            • Ages 6-12
            • School begins
            • Can lead  to us feeling bad about ourselves for the rest of our lives (Inferiority Complex)
            • Feel good or bad about accomplishments
            Identity vs. Role Confusion
              • Ages 13-15
              • Who am I
              • Try different things
              Intimacy vs. Isolation
              • Have to balance work and relationships
              • Prioritize
              Generality vs. Stagnation
              • Middle adult 
              • Will I succeed in life 
              • Mid-life crisis
              Integrity vs. Despair 
              • Look back on life 
              • Senior
              • Was my life meaningful or do I regret it?
              Jean Piaget
              Cognitive Development
              • It was thought that kids were just stupid versions of adults
              • Kids learn differently from adults 
              Schema
              • Children view the world through schemes (as do adults for the most part)
              • Schemes are ways we interpret the world around us
              • It is basically what you picture in your head when you think of anything
              Assimilation 
              • Incorporating new experiences into existing schemas
              Accommodation
              • Changing an existing schema to adopt to new information
              Stages of Cognitive Development

              1. Sensorimotor Stage
              • Experience the world through our senses
              • Do not have object permanence
              • Ages 0-2
              2. Preoperational Stage
              • Ages 2-7
              • Have object permanence
              • Begin to use language to represent objects and ideas
              • Egocentric: cannot look at the world through anyone's eyes but their own 
              • Conservation: refers to the idea that a quantity remains the same despite changes in appearance and is part of logical thinking
              3. Concrete Operational Stage
              • Can demonstrate concept of conservation 
              • Learn to think logically 
              4. Formal Operational Stage
              • Abstract reasoning 
              • Manipulate objects in our minds without seeing them
              • Hypothesis testing
              • Trial and error 
              • Meta cognition
              • Not every adult gets to this stage
              Types of Intelligence

              Crystallized
              • Accumilated knowledge
              • Increases with age
              Fluid
              • Ability to solve problems and quickly think abstractly 
              • Peaks in 20's and then decreases over time