creierul de-a lungul anilor - adolescentii Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main anatomical changes in the adolescent brain?

A
  1. Shrinkage of grey matter – synaptic pruning – you lose the connections that you don’t use
  2. Expansion of white matter – axons – increase in dendrites
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2
Q

Why does shrinkage of grey matter happen?

A

Due to synaptic pruning

At age 7 there is more neurones than at age 15

Females are said to experience maturation earlier than boys because this synaptic pruning begins earlier in females. They lose connections that they do not need which makes communications that are needed quicker and more efficient

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3
Q

Why does expansion of white matter occur?

A

Due to myelinisation – when axons are covered in a fatty layer to speed up connections

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4
Q

What happens in the prefrontal cortex in adolescents?

A

Prefrontal cortex functions include planning and reasoning

It grows until 25 yo

In teens, the PFC is immature which makes them more prone to risky behaviours

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5
Q

What happens in the amygdala in adolescents?

A

Emotional core for passion, impulse, fear and aggression

Adults rely less on this and use prefrontal cortex more

Teens rely more on this and are more impulsive

The amygdala matures faster than the prefrontal cortex

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6
Q

What happens in the parietal lobe in adolescents?

A

Responsible for touch, sight, language

Grows till early 20s

In adults it is fully developed

In teens- they do not process information effectively

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7
Q

What happens in the ventral striatum in adolescents?

A

This is the reward centre

In adults it is fully developed

In teens it is not fully developed hence why teens are more excited by reward than consequence

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8
Q

What happens in the hippocampus in adolescents?

A

Hippocampus is the hub of memory and learning

In adults it is fully functional and loses neurones with age

In teens it has a tremendous learning curve

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9
Q

How are teenagers more risky especially with peers?

A

Measured using the Stoplight driving game

The aim is to reach as quickly as possible the end of straight tracks with intersections

2 conditions: peers / no peers

RESULTS:
Adolescents made riskier decisions and had more crashes when in the presence of peers

Young adults made less riskier decisions and crashed less when with peers

Adults made more riskier decisions but crashed less with peers

But overall teenagers made the most risky decisions and crashed the most

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10
Q

what did the experiment find in terms of brain activations

A

Higher left lateral prefrontal cortex activation in adults than teens

Higher right ventral striatum and left orbitofrontal cortex in teens with peers than adults - so they activated reward centre suggesting they get a reward from showing they are riskier to their peers and don’t think about the consequence (crashes)

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11
Q

What are the risky tendencies in different cultures?

A

There is association between age and risk taking

Around the world risk taking is generally highest among late adolescence based on Spotlight task and BART

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12
Q

when does sensation seeking peak

A

at 19yo

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13
Q

when does self regulation peak

A

between 23 and 26

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14
Q

what is impulsivity

A

engaging in unplanned risky behaviours and being unable to inhibit behavioural impulses and thoughts

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15
Q

what is motor (behavioural) impulsivity

A

response inhibition, related to dorsolateral prefrontal lobe

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16
Q

what is cognitive impulsivity

A

inability to compare immediate and future consequences of events

related to ventromedial prefrontal lobe

17
Q

what’s impulsivity like in the teenage brain

A

reduced myelin growth in frontal areas is linked to impulsivity traits

so less myelin means more impulsivity

In adolescents with high impulsivity, myelin growth in frontal areas is particularly reduced

18
Q

what is lower cortical thickness associated with

A

lower cortical thickness is associated with impulsive choice in specific brain networks that are important for decision making

19
Q

what is compulsivity like in the teenage brain

A

greatest myelin related growth in late adolescence/early adulthood in cingulate cortex and frontostriatal areas

reduced rate of this growth is linked to compulsivity traits

less myelin - more compulsivity

20
Q

reward-related activities increase in teenagers

A

dopamine reactivity is enhanced

this may cause:
- sensation seeking behaviours
- selective focus on rewards rather than risks
- increased susceptibility to alcohol

21
Q

why do many mental disorders appear in adolescence

A

the big changes the brain experiences may explain why adolescence is the time when many mental disorders emerge

22
Q

what is the link between genetic and environmental effects in mental health and adolescence

A

genes interact with environment to affect behaviour

allele alone bring no additional risk

but allele plus stressful life events lead to increased risk of self-report depression symptoms

23
Q

what is an example of when E and G interact

A

Anorexia which is a multi-factorial disorder

Traits in childhood such as negative emotion, perfectionism, drive for thinness, OCD interact with genetic changes in adolescence such brain development and hormones which leads to dieting