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The Adolescent Brain Janet Matthews and Sarah Ramowski.

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Presentation on theme: "The Adolescent Brain Janet Matthews and Sarah Ramowski."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Adolescent Brain Janet Matthews and Sarah Ramowski

2 Adolescent Evolution  ages 11 – 24  Amygdala driven  Dopamine sensitive  Filter deficient  Risk prone  Sensation-seeking –Peer presence

3 Learning Ladder Novice to expert Novice to expert Unconscious; incompetent Conscious; incompetent Conscious; competent Unconscious; competent

4 Functional Evolution  Amphibian ~ Mammal  Autopsy ~ MRI  Primitive ~ Cerebral  Myelination

5 Emotional evolution  Affect  Shame ~ Guilt  Eustress ~ distress  Self talk emerges  Puberty ~ maturity

6 Adolescent Prevention Messages Repetition Repetition Fiber tract sculpting Fiber tract sculpting Myelinates tracts Myelinates tracts Pruning Pruning Lifestyle impact Lifestyle impact Increase voluntary control Increase voluntary control Brain > Mind Brain > Mind

7 The Big Picture  Adolescence is incredibly exciting time in brain development…therefore, also crucial that we nurture adolescent brains  Change our thinking about adolescents and risk taking

8 How Do We Know What We Know?  MRI pictures show brain structures & sites of activity  New: DTI (diffusion tenor imaging) shows color images of neural fibers that transmit signals

9 The Physical  “AA” sites in brain – “Appearance Attractiveness” – 5x higher in youth than adults

10 The Emotional  Compared to adult brain, adolescent brain perceives emotions at 2-4x the intensity  Adolescents have 3 basic needs in coping with emotional intensity: 1) Listen; 2) Validate; 3) Support good choices  Adults often use 3 “D’s”: 1) Deny 2) Diminish 3) Disrespect

11 Emotional Safety  Setting the rules for emotional safety is crucial for promoting safety and healthy positive development among youth.  Compliments given to adolescents should be very careful – based on behavioral observations

12 Problem Solving  THP helps adults cope in crisis (calming effect), but in youth it causes anxiety/apprehension  “You need to calm down” is not effective in the moment when THP is activated  Avg 13.6 yrs when youth shift to willingness to engage adults in open conflict – this is NORMAL development

13 Risk Taking  Risk  Reward in Adolescent Brains via Nucleus Accumbens  Teens need safe risk-taking opportunities  Preventing risk-taking: here and now of consequences, not future

14 Risk Taking & the Internet  Perspective taking  Future thought  Online disinhibition effect  Virtual Mystery Tour: healthysexedu.blogspot.com

15 Substance Use  Avoid Boredom  10 – 14 is key window to avoid for alcohol use  Brain is beyond plasticity window, and this is the time where cell mapping & migration process is the highest

16 Substance Use  Pathways activated by alcohol in < 22 y.o. brains can remain excited for 48 hrs after drinking, brain cells self-destruct  Having a male older sibling, especially for boys, is a risk factor for trying drugs/alcohol (often the “first route” into drugs/alc).  Effects of marijuana on brain are increasingly unknown (depending on delivery system)

17 Gender Differences  Female brains have average 29% more verbal capacity (relative to brain size overall) vs. male brains  Are girls “more emotional” than boys? No.  Positive self-esteem between ages 9-10 and 13-14: for boys it drops 12-20%, for girls it drops 20-38%

18 Take Away Messages  Emotions, reasoning, and decision-making are all under construction during adolescence  Time of vulnerability AND capability  Adults can help by de-personalizing teenage behavior  Adolescents need positive adult framing & support for making good choices

19 Resources 1.The Adolescent Brain: A Work in Progress. The National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy. www.teenpregnancy.org/resources/reading/pdf/BRAIN.pdf 2.Brizendine, Luann. The Female Brain. 3.The Dana Foundation. www.dana.org (new relevant research in brain development) 4.The Brain Connection. www.brainconnection.com


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