Transcript Slide 1

Chapters 11 & 12
Adolescence
Psyc311 Developmental
Dr. Wright
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Definition of Puberty
• Pubertas – Latin word for “adult”
• Narrow definition: The process by which an
individual becomes capable of
reproduction.
– The activation of the HPG/HPA axis
• Broad definition: The physical,
psychological, and cultural changes that
occur as the growing child transitions into
adulthood.
Time Periods of
Adolescence
• Early adolescence – 10 to 13 years old
– Continues to be pushed earlier
• Middle adolescence – 14 to 17 years old
• Late adolescence (early adulthood) – 18
to 22 years old
– Continues to be pushed later?
physical changes…
 Primary sex characteristics
• The body organs and reproductive structures and
functions that differ between women and men.
• Gonads (testes and ovaries)
 Secondary sex characteristics
• Characteristics of the body that are caused by
hormones, develop during puberty, and last through
adult life.
• Changes in genitals/breasts/voice
• Pubic/body/facial hair
Tanner Stages
• Sexual maturation in girls
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Growth of breasts/pubic hair
Body growth
Menarche
Underarm hair/oil & sweat glands
• Age of onset: 7 – 13 years
Tanner Stages
• Sexual maturation in boys
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Growth of testes/pubic hair
Body growth
Growth of penis/change of voice
Facial and underarm hair/oil & sweat glands
• Age of onset: 9.5 – 13.5 years
 Rapid acceleration of physical growth
• Adolescent growth spurt
• 3.5 (girls) to 4.0 (boys) inches/year
• ½ adult weight gained during adolescence
 Changes in body composition
• 3:1 muscle to body fat ratio for boys
• 5:4 for girls
• Emergence of sex differences in physical
performance
 Changes in circulatory and respiratory
systems
• Increase in size/capacity of heart and lungs
Two Roles of Hormones
 Organizational role (life-long):
– Modification of the organism early in life
• primarily influencing its anatomy
– Organization/structure of CNS
• “Feminine” vs. “masculan-ized” brain
 Activational role (specific to puberty):
– Structural “remodeling” of brain
– Increase in salience of sexual stimuli, sexual
motivation
– Development of secondary sex characteristics
Hormone Regulatory System
• Endocrine system
• HPA axis
– Hypothalamus  Pituitary gland  Adrenals
– Corticosteroids
– Regulates body’s response to stress
• HPG axis
– Hypothalamus  Pituitary gland  Gonads
(Testes/Ovaries)
– Sex Hormones (Androgens/Estrogens)
– Regulates sexual maturation
The biological changes of puberty can affect the
adolescent’s behavior in at least three ways
impacts of puberty
• Self-esteem
– Body image
• Moods
– Fluctuation of moods
– Due to hormones or environment?
– “Storm and stress”: myth or fact?
• Sleep patterns
– Delayed phase preference
– 9 hours: 1 am to 10 am
• Family relations
– Transformation of parent-child bond
• Peer relations
– Transformation of friendships, romantic relationships
Timing - individual Factors
• Genetic factors
– Timing and tempo
• Environmental factors
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Nutrition
Body weight
Health care
Exposure to hormones/chemicals
Family conflict
Stepfathers
Timing - group Factors
• Comparisons across socioeconomic groups
– Impact of poverty
– Dietary intake, health care, exposure to
disease
• Comparisons across countries
• Comparisons across time periods
– Secular trend
Early Maturation
• Boys
– Early maturation positives
• Popularity, higher self-esteem
– Early maturation negatives
• Deviant, risk behaviors; more rigidity later
• Girls
– Early maturation positives
• Popularity (cultural dependence)
– Early maturation negatives
• Lower self-esteem, eating disorders, emotions, deviant
behaviors
Late Maturation
• Boys
– Late maturation positives
• Higher levels of creativity, inventiveness
– Late maturation negatives
• Low self-esteem, low social competence
• Girls
– Late maturation positives
• Thinner build
– Late maturation negatives
• Social withdrawal
Among the
most
important
brain changes
to take place
at
adolescence
are those in
the prefrontal
cortex and
limbic system.
The second wave….
Longitudinal fMRI studies reveal:
• Period of rapid synaptogenesis and
pruning
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Comparable to 1st 3 yrs of life
Growth: starts with onset of puberty
Pruning: 1% of gray matter/yr
Increased myelination (back to front)
• Opportunity for massive cognitive growth
and learning
– Shift into Piaget’s formal operations
heightened arousal
• Increased hormone activity
– estrogen & testosterone
• Sexual stimulation
• Social status conflict
• Increased neurotransmitter activity
– Limbic system
• heightened emotional sensitivity/reactivity
• norepinephrine
– Punishment/reward system
• increased risk, stimulation-seeking behaviors
• dopamine
– Fluctuations in mood
• Serotonin
(Pre) frontal lobe development
• Final development of executive function
– Planning/problem-solving
– Impulse control
– Seat of “sober 2nd thought”
• Processing of emotions
– Understanding/responding to emotions
• Full Maturation – sometime between
adolescence and early adulthood
• Coincides with child-onset schizophrenia
– Failure in executive functioning
Timing of brain maturation
• Limbic system matures early in puberty
• Prefrontal cortex matures several years later
• Heightened need for reward/stimulation
– leads to increased stimulation-seeking behaviors
• Underdeveloped “sober” assessment of risks
• Increased cognitive/social demands
– Creates cognitive overload
– Difficulty with impulse control
• Time gap may explain why adolescence is a period of heightened
experimentation with risky behaviors
– Increased violence
• kids under 18 account for 25 of violent crime in US
– Drug & alcohol experimentation
– Unsafe sexual activities
Adolescents whose
prefrontal cortical
development is less mature
than normal are more likely
to have conduct problems.
Populations most at risk?
Social implications
• What should the social attitudes be
about adolescent exposure to and
involvement in high-stimulation/highrisk activities?
• Sexual Activity
• Drugs & Alcohol
• Violence
Teen pregnancy
• 750,000 teens between 15-19 years old become
pregnant every year.
– 2/3rds between 18-19 years old.
• African American teens have highest rate
– 134/1,000 vs. 48/1,1000 Caucasian teenagers
• 57% end in birth (11% of all births in US)
– 14% end in miscarriage
– 29% end in abortion
• 82% of those pregnancies were unintended
risk factors
 Physical
• Sexual maturation
– 4-5 years before psychological/emotional maturation
– Becoming longer as puberty starts earlier
• Brain development
– Heightened activation of limbic system
– Increased attraction to risky behaviors
– Pre-frontal development incomplete
• SES factors
– 50% of pregnancies occur in most impoverished
populations
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Less opportunity for education
Less access to birth control
Reduced internal locus of control
Exposure to other risk factors
– drugs, alcohol, abuse, lack of parental monitoring
• Desire for family/stability
consequences
• Should we be concerned about this?
• For teenage parents
– mother in particular
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For baby
For families
For community
Methods of prevention?
Why is teenage pregnancy higher in the US?
Impact of substance abuse
• Alcohol/drug abuse
– Greater potential impairment in learning
– More widespread brain damage
– Repeated exposure may effect path and
quality of development
– Due to reduction in plasticity, this damage
cannot be corrected later!
• So, does this mean all experimentation
with drugs/alcohol bad?
• Should we be worried about exposure to
graphic violence through media?
– Why or why not?