The Developmental Series
The research
Every claim on every poster is drawn from peer-reviewed developmental research. This page lists the frameworks and studies each stage rests on, poster by poster.
How we work. Each poster was drafted from the primary developmental literature, then independently audited against current (2024–2026) peer-reviewed research before the series went on sale. Where the science has moved — for example, the once-popular claim that the brain "matures at 25", since walked back in the literature — the posters say what the evidence now says. When the evidence updates, the posters update.
01 · Wired for Connection
0–6 months
Frameworks: co-regulation and affiliative neuroscience; attachment theory.
- Tronick — the still-face paradigm: infants register withdrawal of attuned response within seconds.
- Bowlby & Ainsworth — attachment theory: caregiver responsiveness predicts later emotional resilience.
- Feldman (2020) — affiliative neuroscience: the infant uses the caregiver's autonomic nervous system as the template for its own.
- Infant neurodevelopment — synaptogenesis peaks at up to a million new connections per second in the early years.
02 · The Secure Base
6–12 months
Frameworks: attachment consolidation; object permanence.
- Bowlby; Ainsworth — the Strange Situation: a secure base predicts confident exploration, social competence and stress regulation into adolescence.
- Piaget — object permanence (sensorimotor stage IV).
- Yates et al. (2025, Science) — episodic-like memory encoding observed from around the first year; the infant hippocampus is more capable than older teaching assumed.
03 · The World Responds
1–2 years
Frameworks: sensorimotor learning; scaffolded development.
- Piaget — late sensorimotor / early preoperational stage: the child works through actions, not yet symbols.
- Vygotsky — the zone of proximal development: what she can do with you scaffolds what she will soon do alone.
- Motor-cognitive coupling and imitation research — mirror-system activity; learning by watching.
04 · The Will Awakens
2–2½ years
Frameworks: autonomy versus shame; early prefrontal development.
- Erikson — autonomy vs shame and doubt: the toddler tests whether her own will is acceptable.
- Developmental neuroscience — prefrontal inhibition barely online; the amygdala drives behaviour.
- Language acquisition research — vocabulary explodes while emotional language lags behind.
05 · Nervous System Under Construction
2½–3 years
Frameworks: co-regulation; stress reactivity.
- Siegel — the "upstairs/downstairs brain" image: a useful metaphor, even though affective neuroscience describes integrated networks rather than two floors. The mechanism it points to is real.
- Feldman (2020) — repeated co-regulation lays down the pathways connecting emotional reactivity to thinking-brain regulation.
- Stress reactivity research — an adult staying calm during the storm encodes that recovery is possible.
06 · Regulation Becoming Internal
3–4 years
Frameworks: affect labelling; private speech; theory of mind.
- Siegel & Bryson — "name it to tame it": labelling an affective state engages prefrontal regions that down-regulate amygdala activation.
- Vygotsky — private speech as the precursor to inner speech.
- Theory of mind research — the child is starting to know that you have your own mind.
07 · Integration Taking Root
4–5 years
Frameworks: initiative versus guilt; conscience development.
- Erikson — initiative vs guilt: testing whether her impulses and ideas are acceptable in the social world.
- Theory of mind — the false-belief watershed around age four.
- Conscience development research — guided reflection and repair build the neural substrate of empathy and impulse control.
08 · The Rules Take Hold
5–7 years
Frameworks: concrete operations; industry versus inferiority; executive function.
- Piaget — concrete operations: logical reasoning about real situations.
- Erikson — industry vs inferiority: competence builds self-worth; persistent failure builds the opposite.
- Executive function research — working memory, inhibition and task-switching consolidate rapidly between five and seven.
09 · The Mirror of Others
7–9 years
Frameworks: social comparison; perspective taking.
- Festinger — social comparison theory: self-concept built by reference to similar others.
- Selman — perspective-taking stages reach mutual reciprocity in this window.
- Social cognitive development — growing activity in regions associated with social cognition and self-referential thought; self-esteem becomes domain-specific.
10 · The Inner World Deepens
9–11 years
Frameworks: emerging abstract thought; the narrative self; conventional moral reasoning.
- Piaget — formal operations beginning: hypothetical and abstract reasoning.
- Default mode network research — the brain's self-referential, narrative-building system matures rapidly.
- Pre-pubertal endocrinology — hormonal shifts already under way in many children by nine or ten.
- Kohlberg — conventional moral reasoning consolidates.
11 · The Brain Rewires
11–14 years
Frameworks: the dual-systems model; adolescent neural remodelling.
- Steinberg — dual-systems model: the socio-emotional system matures around puberty; cognitive control keeps developing well past it.
- Casey, Dahl, Crone — adolescent neuroscience: synaptic pruning, myelination, heightened sensitivity to peer evaluation and reward.
- Crowley et al. (2018) — sleep onset shifts biologically later by one to two hours.
12 · Who Am I Becoming
14–16 years
Frameworks: identity formation.
- Erikson — identity vs role confusion: the central task of mid-adolescence.
- Marcia — identity status model: healthy formation needs both exploration and commitment.
- Adolescent neuroscience — continuing prefrontal maturation; heightened social-brain engagement.
13 · Becoming Their Own Person
16–18 years
Frameworks: self-determination; separation-individuation.
- Deci & Ryan — self-determination theory: autonomy support predicts better outcomes than control, especially at this age.
- Prefrontal maturation research — planning and inhibition now substantially more reliable.
- Separation-individuation theory — emotional autonomy without relational disengagement is the target.
14 · Out Into the World
18–25 years
Frameworks: emerging adulthood; lifespan brain development; mental-health epidemiology.
- Arnett — emerging adulthood: identity exploration, instability, self-focus, feeling in-between, possibility.
- Somerville (2016) — brain maturation has no clean endpoint; the "matures at 25" claim has been walked back.
- Bethlehem et al. (2022) — lifespan brain charts: structural change continues into the 30s and beyond.
- Solmi et al. (2022, World Psychiatry) — meta-analysis of 192 studies: 62.5% of lifetime mental illness onsets before age 25, peak at 14.5.
15 · The Self Consolidates
25–30 years
Frameworks: intimacy and generativity; established adulthood.
- Erikson — intimacy vs isolation, with generativity beginning to appear.
- Mehta et al. (2020) — "established adulthood": the consolidation phase for partnership, work and life structure.
- Bethlehem et al. (2022) — the brain continues to remodel through experience well past 30; neuroplasticity does not stop.