Adolescent Psychology

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Transcript Adolescent Psychology

Adolescent Psychology
Chapter 2
Did you ever feel like this?
I am pretty confused. I wonder whether I am weird or normal. My body is starting
to change, but I sure don’t look like a lot of my friends. I still look like a kid for
the most part. My best friend is only 13, but he looks like he is 16 or 17. I get
nervous in the locker room during PE class because when I go to take a shower,
I’m afraid somebody is going to make fun of me since I’m not as physically
developed as some of the others.
I don’t like my breasts. They are too small and they look funny. I’m afraid guys
won’t like me if they don’t get bigger.
I can’t stand the way I look. I have zits all over my face. My hair is dull and
stringy. It never stays in place. My nose is too big. My lips are too small. My legs
are too short. My body is a disaster.
I’m short and I can’t stand it. My father is 6 feet tall, and here I am only 5 feet 4.
I’m 14 already. I look like a kid, and I get teased a lot, especially by other guys. I’m
always the last one picked for sides in basketball because I’m so short. Girls don’t
seem to be interested in me either because most of them are taller than I am.
Today we’re going to talk about
Puberty, Health, & Biological Foundations
Puberty
Determinants
Secular Trends
Psychological Aspects
Adolescent Health
Risk-taking behaviors
Nutrition & Exercise
What we can do…
Puberty
The period of rapid physical maturation
predominantly occurring during early adolescence, and
involves hormonal & bodily changes.
Determinants
Heredity
Hormones
The Endocrine System
Weight, Body, Fat, and Leptin
Weight at Birth and in Infancy
Sociocultural and Environmental Factors
Heredity
It is programmed into our genes
There is variability in both onset &duration
Onset ranges between 9 &16 years of age
Why is there variability?
Hormones
Powerful chemicals secreted by the endocrine
glands; carried through the body by the
bloodstream.
Androgens: The main class
of male sex hormones
Estrogens: The main class
of female sex hormones
Hormones
Hormone Levels by Sex and Pubertal Stage for
Testosterone and Estradiol
Fig. 3.1
The Endocrine System
Ensures that hormonal stimulation prompts maturation &
maintains reproductive capacity
Hypothalamus: structure in the brain that monitors eating,
drinking, & sex
Pituitary Gland: controls growth & regulates other glands
Thyroid: works with pituitary to release growth hormones
Adrenal Glands: works with pituitary and plays a role in adrenarche
Gonads: sex glands
Testes & Ovaries
The Endocrine System
Major Endocrine Glands Involved in Pubertal Change
Fig. 3.2
How does it work?
Negative Feedback Loop
Thermostat-Furnace Metaphor
Hypothalamus  Pituitary Gland  Gonads…
Hypothalamus secretes Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)
Pituitary Gland secretes 2 Types of Gonadotropins
Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH): stimulates follicle development
in females & sperm production in males
Luteinizing hormone (LH): regulates estrogen secretion & ovum
development in females; testosterone production in males
Gonads secrete androgens & estrogens
Feedback System of Sex Hormones
(Testes in males,
ovaries in females)
Fig. 3.3
Phases of Puberty
Adrenarche:
from about 6-10 years of age
Adrenal androgens
Gonadarche:
sexual maturation & development of reproductive maturity
HPG axis reactivated
Spermarche: A boy’s first ejaculation of semen
Menarche: A girl’s first menstrual period
Weight, Body Fat, & Leptin
It is hypothesized that a child must reach a critical body mass
before puberty, especially menarche, emerges.
Percent body fat influences the onset of menarche
Leptin may signal the beginning & progression of puberty
Weight at Birth & in Infancy
Low birth weight girls experience menarche
approximately 5-10 months earlier than normal birth
weight girls (Ibanez & de Zegher, 2006; van Weissenbruch &
Delemarre-van de Waal, 2006).
Rapid weight gain in infancy is related to earlier
pubertal onset (Dunger, Ahmed, & Ong, 2006).
Sociocultural &
Environmental Factors
Are there links between environment & puberty?
Adolescents in developed countries & large urban areas reach
puberty earlier than individuals in less developed countries &rural
areas (Graham, 2005).
Children adopted to developed countries from less developed
experience puberty earlier than those children who stay in the less
developed country (Teilman, et al. 2002).
Early experiences linked with earlier onset include: father absence,
low SES, family conflict, and maltreatment.
Pollutants have also been thought to influence puberty.
Physical Changes In Puberty
Growth Spurt
Most rapid since infancy
earlier for girls (age 11.5) than boys (13.5) on average
3.5 - 4 inches per year
Weight gain follows roughly same timetable as height gain
Skeletal changes
Sexual Maturation
Males: increase penis & testicle size, pubic hair, voice change,
spermarche, armpit & facial hair
Females: breasts enlarge, pubic & armpit hair, menarche
Sexual Maturation
Normal Range and Average Development of Sexual
Characteristics in Males and Females
Fig. 3.5
Secular Trends in Puberty
Imagine a toddler displaying all the features of puberty.
A 3-year old girl with fully developed breasts
A 3-year old boy with a deep male voice.
That is what you’d see by the year 2250 if the age of onset
continued to drop at the rate at which it occurred for much of the
20th century.
Is this possible?
The Age at Menarche has
Declined
Median Ages at Menarche in Selected Northern European
Countries and the United States from 1845 to 1969
Fig. 3.7
Psychological Dimensions of
Puberty
Body Image
Hormones & Behavior
Menarche & the Menstrual Cycle
Early & Late Maturation
Are Puberty’s Effects Exaggerated?
Activity Time 
Break up into groups of 4-6 people.
Need Guys and Girls in each Group
Each of you has two children, a boy and a girl, about to enter adolescence. You are
a long distance from your children presently and tomorrow you will be leaving on a
long journey that will prevent you from having contact with either child for the
next ten years. This morning is your last opportunity to inform your children of
the changes they will experience during puberty, so you need to use this chance to
tell your children what you consider important to help them better deal with these
changes. The only form of communication available to you is the mail. Each of you
is to assist your group in writing two letters, one to your daughter and one to your
son. As a group you must decide what to put in your letters. The choice is yours
except in the letter to your daughter you must discuss menarche, and in the letter
to your son you must discuss nocturnal emissions and spontaneous erections. You
are to write these letters using a vocabulary that will be understood by these
children and that will give them a positive attitude toward the changes they will
experience. Each group must decide which letter it is going to write first.
Lets Talk About Adolescent
Health
Adolescence is a critical juncture in the adoption of
behaviors that are relevant to health.
Nutrition
Exercise
Sleep
Maladaptive vs. Adaptive behaviors
Despite us becoming a more health conscious
nation…many adolescents still smoke, have poor
nutritional habits, and spend too much of their time as
couch potatoes….WHY?
Risk Taking Behavior
Adolescents seek experiences that create high intensity
feelings.
They are drawn to music videos that shock and
bombard the senses.
It is a time when sex, drugs, loud music, and other
high-stimulation experiences take on great appeal.
What are some strategies for assisting adolescents to
satisfy their motivation for risk-taking without
compromising their health?
Health Services
Adolescents suffer from a greater # of acute health
conditions than adults do.
Adolescents underutilize health care services
Barriers to better health care include:
Cost, poor organization and availability, lack of
confidentiality, and reluctance to communicate with
adolescents
Adolescents’ don’t believe that health care providers can help
Must talk about important issues:
STI, contraception, drug use, depression, nutrition, stress
Only 25% of health care providers talk with adolescents
during their last visit
Leading Causes of Death
1. Unintentional Injuries/Accidents
•
•
½ of deaths between 15-24
Car accidents
2. Homicide
3. Suicide
•
Suicide rate has tripled since 1950s
Nutrition and Exercise
Adolescents have poor nutrition
Poor food choices
An increasing number of eating disorders…more on that later
though.
Adolescent exercise behavior is also poor
Less activity
Many benefits to being active!!
Sports
56% play at least one sport
Positive and negative influences
Lets Talk Sleep
Its reported that 45% of adolescents get inadequate
sleep on school nights (National Sleep Foundation, 2006).
This appears to worsen the older we get (62% older
adols vs 21% younger adols).
Maladaptive sleep patterns are correlated with
sleepiness (obviously), irritability, depression, and
caffeine addiction.
Also, research has found that the less sleep we get the
less likely we are to exercise regularly, eat healthily, and
de-stress appropriately.