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Adolescence

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Psyc311 Developmental Dr. Wright * * * * * * Please insert Figure 11.7 - Tenth-grade students in the United States and Europe who have used various substances. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adolescence


1
Adolescence
  • Psyc311 Developmental
  • Dr. Wright

2
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.

3
time periods of adolescent
  • Adolescence is a unique developmental period
  • it keeps changing!
  • Early adolescence 11 to 13 years old
  • Continues to be pushed earlier (9-10)
  • Middle adolescence 14 to 17 years old
  • Late adolescence (early adulthood) 18 to 20
    years old
  • Continues to be pushed later (21-24)

4
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

5
Tanner Stages
6
Tanner Stages
7
changes
  • 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
  • 31 muscle to body fat ratio for boys
  • 54 for girls
  • Emergence of sex differences in physical
    performance
  • Changes in circulatory and respiratory systems
  • Increase in size/capacity of heart and lungs

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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 and body
  • Activational role (specific to puberty)
  • Structural remodeling of brain
  • Increase in salience of sexual stimuli, sexual
    motivation
  • Development of secondary sex characteristics

11
hormone regulatory systems
  • Endocrine system
  • HPA axis
  • Hypothalamus ? Pituitary gland ? Adrenals
  • Corticosteroids
  • Regulates bodys response to stress
  • HPG axis
  • Hypothalamus ? Pituitary gland ? Gonads
    (Testes/Ovaries)
  • Sex Hormones (Androgens/Estrogens)
  • Regulates sexual maturation

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The hormonal changes brought on by puberty can
affect the adolescents behavior in at least
three ways.
14
impacts of puberty
  • 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

15
impacts of puberty
  • Self-esteem
  • Changing body image
  • Changing sense of self
  • Moods
  • Increased stress Increased sensitivity
  • Fluctuation of moods
  • Due to hormones or environment?
  • Storm and stress myth or fact?

16
moods
17
timing - individual factors
  • Genetic factors
  • Timing and tempo
  • Environmental factors
  • Nutrition
  • Body weight
  • Exposure to hormones/chemicals
  • Family conflict
  • Stepfathers

18
timing - group factors
  • Comparisons
  • Across socioeconomic groups
  • Impact of poverty
  • Dietary intake, health care, exposure to disease
  • Across countries
  • Impact of industrialization
  • Across time periods
  • Secular trend

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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

22
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

23
the second wave.
  • Longitudinal fMRI studies reveal
  • Period of rapid synaptogenesis and pruning
  • Increased myelination (back to front)
  • Opportunity for massive cognitive growth and
    learning
  • Shift into Piagets formal operations

24
Among the most important changes to take place in
the adolescence brain are those in the prefrontal
cortex and limbic system.
25
(pre) frontal development
  • Final development of executive function
  • Planning/problem-solving
  • Impulse control
  • Seat of sober 2nd thought
  • Full maturation sometime between adolescence
    and early adulthood
  • Coincides with child-onset schizophrenia
  • Failure in executive functioning

26
heightened arousal
  • Increased hormone activity
  • estrogen testosterone
  • Sexual stimulation
  • Social status conflict
  • Increased neurotransmitter activity
  • heightened emotional sensitivity/reactivity
  • Limbic system (norepinephrine)
  • increased risk, stimulation-seeking behaviors
  • Punishment/reward system (dopamine)
  • increased fluctuations in mood
  • Serotonin

27
timing of brain maturation
  • Limbic system matures early in puberty
  • Prefrontal cortex matures several years later
  • Heightened need for reward/stimulation
  • leads to increased risk-taking,
    stimulation-seeking behaviors
  • Higher level of emotional volatility
  • Underdeveloped sober assessment of risks
  • Increased cognitive/social demands
  • Creates cognitive overload
  • Difficulty with impulse control

28
timing of brain maturation
  • Time gap may explain why adolescence is a period
    of heightened experimentation with risky
    behaviors.
  • Increased risk of
  • violence/criminal activity
  • kids under 18 account for 25 of violent crime in
    US
  • drug alcohol experimentation
  • unsafe sexual activities

29
conduct problems
Adolescents whose prefrontal cortical development
is less mature than normal are even more likely
to have conduct problems. Populations most at
risk?
30
teen pregnancy
31
teen pregnancy in US
  • 750-850,000 teens between 15-19 years old become
    pregnant every year.
  • 2/3rds between 18-19 years old.
  • 25,000 under 15 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
  • 86 of teen mothers remain unmarried
  • 35 have a 2nd child within two years

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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

34
Why is teenage pregnancy higher in the US?
35
consequences
  • SES factors
  • 50 of pregnancies occur in most impoverished
    populations
  • 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

36
consequences
  • Should we be concerned about this?
  • For teenage parents
  • mother in particular
  • For baby
  • For families
  • For community
  • Methods of prevention?

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adolescent substance use
  • Have tried, by grade 10
  • cigarettes 40
  • alcohol 63
  • illegal drugs 38
  • By end of high school
  • 17 smoke regularly
  • 28 recent heavy drinking
  • 40 tried illegal drugs

Figure 11.7
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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?

41
adolescent substance abusers
  • Compared to experimenters
  • more antisocial, impulsive acts
  • start earlier
  • more likely to be affected by
  • genetic and environmental factors
  • low SES
  • family drug use
  • family difficulties
  • physical, sexual abuse
  • poor school performance

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  • Should we be worried about exposure to graphic
    violence through media?
  • Why or why not?
  • What reasons might we have for thinking
    adolescents are particularly vulnerable to
    aggression/violence?

44
social implications
  • What should the social attitudes be about
    adolescent exposure to and involvement in
    high-stimulation/high-risk activities?
  • Sexual Activity
  • Drugs Alcohol
  • Violence

45
identity development
  • Adolescence ? Erickson stage of identity crisis
  • Identity
  • Sense of individual self
  • Selection of commitments, beliefs, values
  • Interpersonal process
  • Taking their place in the adult community

46
cognitive changes
  • Importance of conceptual structure of thinking
  • Propositional logic thinking constrained by
    logical relations
  • Emphasis on rationality and scientific
    methodology
  • Importance of conceptual resources employed in
    thinking
  • Five process Attention, working memory,
    processing speed, organization, meta-cognition

47
cognitive changes
  • Piagets Formal Operational Thought
  • Logical, abstract thinking
  • Thinking about possibilities
  • If-then thinking
  • Connection between how things are and how they
    might have been or could be.
  • Thinking about thinking
  • Understanding knowledge (how/when gained)
  • Monitoring ones own mental states

48
relativism
  • Not everything is black and white
  • Recognition of importance of perspective
  • Death of childish realism/absolutism
  • Can result in extreme skepticism
  • Rejection of authority
  • Rejection of cultural/social norms
  • Everything is ok no right/wrong
  • Tolerance for different beliefs
  • Though less tolerance for actual
    interaction/helping

49
adolescent egocentrism
  • Increased introspection, self-consciousness,
    rationalization
  • Responsible for adolescent version of
    egocentrism.
  • Imaginary audience
  • Personal fable
  • Importance of personal individuality

50
  • Crisis never begins diffusion
  • Crisis begins gt ends with foreclosure
  • Crisis begins gt ends with achievement
  • Psychosocial moratorium
  • Period of exploration
  • Importance in contemporary society?

51
  • What are some of the grounds of identity?
  • Gender
  • Ethnicity/culture
  • Age group
  • Vocation
  • Political ideology
  • Religious/moral values

52
  • What is gender identity?
  • Function of gender roles
  • Adolescence adulthood
  • Gender intensification
  • Social/cultural pressures
  • Peer pressures
  • Parental pressures
  • Biological pressures

53
  • What is ethnic identity?
  • Identification
  • Physical/psychological characteristics
  • Cultural practices/beliefs
  • Racial socialization
  • Majority vs. minority status
  • Dislocation from native lands
  • Cultural heritage
  • Positive vs. negative identity
  • Assimilation vs. marginality
  • Bi-culturalism

54
  • Vocational identity
  • Aspect of identity associated with career.
  • Being a lawyer
  • Being a janitor
  • Religious identity
  • Aspect of identity associated with religious
    belief system.
  • Being a Christian or Buddhist
  • Being an atheist
  • Age identity
  • Aspects of identity associated with age group.
  • Being a teenager
  • Being an elderly person

55
Identity and stereotypes
  • Identities commonly incorporate/activate
    stereotypes
  • Common characteristics associated with
  • Being female
  • Being Native American
  • Being a plumber
  • Being a liberal
  • Some characteristics positive, others negative.
  • Stereotype activation makes these characteristics
    salient.
  • This can have incredibly powerful effects on
    behavior.

56
  • Gender and ethnicity stereotypes
  • Influence on academic performance
  • When gender made salient
  • Females under-perform on math exams
  • When ethnicity made salient
  • Blacks under-perform on academic tests
  • Whites over-perform on academic tests
  • Can be activated by something as simple as asking
    ethnicity on demographic form!

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  • Clash of multiple identities
  • Asian females
  • Baseline math performance
  • When gender made salient, perform less well
  • When ethnicity made salient, perform better

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Other effects
  • When primed with racial stereotypes people were
    more likely to perceive a power tool as a gun.
  • People primed with elderly stereotype will
    perceive hills to be steeper and distances
    longer.
  • People primed with stereotype of obesity
    perceived people to be less intelligent, more
    lazy.
  • Priming with gender influences perception of
    artistic pieces and writing.
  • Priming of identity stereotypes facilitate
    specific interpretations of behavior.

62
  • Positive identity stereotypes create uplift
  • Negative identity stereotypes create threat
  • A person can have a mixture of both in their
    identity.
  • Subtle and powerful influence of our identity on
    our perception, attitudes, and behaviors.
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