SCREENENCLOSURES- screen enclosure, patio screen enclosure | ||
this site, job hunting, rights reserved, all rights, good will, site map | ||
longboat key, critter ridge, siesta key, plant nursery, palm trees | ||
1
|
This article is about biological human development. For psychological human development, see Human development (psychology).
| This article does not cite any references or sources. (January 2008) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
Human development is the process of growing to maturity. In biological terms, this entails growth from a one-celled zygote to an adult human being.
Contents |
A spermatozoon fertilizing an ovum
Development begins with fertilization, the process by which the male gamete, the sperm cell, and the female gamete, the oocyte, fuse to give rise to a diploid cell, the zygote.
In medicine, pregnancy is defined as beginning when a fertilized zygote becomes implanted in a woman\'s uterus. This occurs when the zygote then becomes embedded into the endometrium (lining of the uterus) where it forms a placenta, for the purpose of receiving essential nutrients through the uterus wall. The umbilical cord in a newborn child signifies the remnants of implantation.
The zygote undergoes rapid mitotic divisions with no significant growth (a process known as cleavage) and cellular differentiation, leading to development of an embryo.
Childbirth is the process in which the baby is born. It is considered by many to be the beginning of a person\'s life, where age is defined relative to this event in most cultures.
Terms for stages of age-related physical development include, with their approximate age ranges:
Also sometimes used are terms that specify one\'s age in numbers, such as:
| yearsApproximately | ||
| Child | prenatal | >0 |
| infancy | 0 - walking | |
| toddlerhood | walking - 3 | |
| play age | 3-6 | |
| preadolescence | 10 - puberty | |
| adolescence | puberty - 19 | |
| Young adult | twentysomething | 20-29 |
| thirtysomething | 30-39 | |
| Middle age | fortysomething | 40-49 |
| quinquagenarian | 50-59 | |
| Advanced adult | sexagenarian | 60-69 |
| septuagenarian | 70-79 | |
| octogenarian | 80-89 | |
| nonagenarian | 90-99 | |
| centenarian | 100-109 | |
| supercentenarian | 110 |
Note: the Tanner stages can be used to approximately judge a child\'s age based on physical development.
| Human topics |
|---|
| Anatomy · Appearance · Art · Behavior · Biology · Civilization · Communication · Condition · Culture · Development · Evolution · Genetics · Health · Mind · Nature · Rights · Sexuality · Society · Technology |
| Human development: biological - psychological | |
|---|---|
| Stages | Prenatal development • Pre- and perinatal psychology • Infancy • Toddlerhood • Childhood • Preadolescence • Puberty • Adolescence • Adulthood - Early adulthood • Middle adulthood • Late adulthood |
| Development | Child development (stages) • Youth development • Ageing & Senescence |
| Theorists-theories | John Bowlby-attachment • Erik Erikson-psychosocial • Sigmund Freud-psychosexual • Lawrence Kohlberg-moral • Jean Piaget-cognitive • Lev Vygotsky-cultural-historical |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia