Describe preterm and small-for-date infants. How are they different?

What will be an ideal response?

Answer: Preterm infants are born several weeks or more before their due date. Although they are small, their weight may still be appropriate, based on time spent in the uterus. Small-for-date infants are below their expected weight considering length of the pregnancy. Some small-for-date infants are full-term. Others are preterm babies who are especially underweight. Small-for-date infants—especially those who are also preterm—usually have more serious problems. During the first year, they are more likely to die, catch infections, and show evidence of brain damage. By middle childhood, they are smaller in stature, have lower intelligence scores, are less attentive, achieve more poorly in school, and are socially immature. Small-for-date infants are especially likely to suffer from neurological impairments that permanently weaken their capacity to manage stress. Severe stress, in turn, heightens their susceptibility to later physical and psychological health problems.

Psychology

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Questions about how the mind works and the nature of free will can be traced back to

a. Wilhelm Wundt. b. Hermann Ebbinghaus. c. the end of the nineteenth century. d. the fourth and fifth centuries B.C.

Psychology

Your roommate is from Denmark and she was telling you that she and her boyfriend had sexual intercourse frequently and her parents allowed him to spend the night frequently with her

You were quite surprised to learn this and asked if her situation was unusual. She indicated that ____. a. yes, it was very unusual, Denmark is very restrictive regarding sexual behavior b. yes, it was somewhat unusual. None of her friends were allowed to have their boy- or girlfriends spend the night with them c. no, Denmark has a very permissive attitude regarding teenage sexual behavior d. it was somewhat unusual, but if the parents signed consent forms, their children could acquire contraception

Psychology