Chapter 14 Flashcards

Adolescence: Biosocial Development

1
Q

The time between the first onrush of hormones and full adult physical development.

A

Puberty

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2
Q

How long does puberty last?

A

3-5 years

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3
Q

A girl’s first menstrual period, signaling that she has begun ovulation.
*****Pregnancy is biologically possible, but ovulation and menstruation are often irregular for years after menarche.

A

Menarche-

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4
Q

A boy’s first ejaculation of sperm.

*****Erections can occur as early as infancy, but ejaculation signals sperm production.

A

Spermarche-

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5
Q

An organic chemical substance that is produced by one body tissue and conveyed via the bloodstream to another to affect some physiological function. Various may influence thoughts, urges, emotions, and behavior.

A

Hormone

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6
Q

A gland in the brain that responds to a signal from the hypothalamus by producing many hormones, including those that regulate growth and control other glands, among them the adrenal and sex glands.

A

Pituitary

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7
Q

Two glands, located above the kidneys that produce hormones, including the “stress hormones” epinephrine (adrenaline) & norepinephrine

A

Adrenal glands-

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8
Q

A sequence of hormone production

and originates in the hypothalamus, moving to the pituitary and then to the adrenal glands.

A

HPA (hypothalamus–pituitary–adrenal) axis-

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9
Q

The paired sex glands (ovaries in females, testicles in males)
produce hormones and gametes

A

Gonads-

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10
Q

A sequence of hormone production

originates in the hypothalamus, moves to the pituitary gland and then to the gonads

A

HPG (hypothalamus-pituitary-gonad) axis-

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11
Q

A sex hormone, considered the chief estrogen.

Females produce more estradiol than males do.

A

Estradiol-

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12
Q

A sex hormone, the best known of the androgens (male hormones).
Secreted in far greater amounts by males than by females.

A

Testosterone-

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13
Q

Normal levels of hormones can be between ages ___ to ____.

A

8 to 14

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14
Q

About _____ of the variation in age of puberty is genetic.

A

2/3rds

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15
Q

Data on puberty over the centuries reveals a dramatic example of a long-term statistical increase or decrease called a

** has stopped in developed nations, possibly due to nutrition.

A

secular trend.

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16
Q

A hormone that affects appetite and is believed to affect the onset of puberty.

**Levels increase during adulthood and peak at around age 12

A

Leptin

17
Q

Affects fertility and puberty by making reproduction more difficult though not all scientist agree

A

Stress

18
Q

Puberty arrives ______ if:
a child’s parents are sick, addicted or divorced
the neighborhood is violent and impoverished

A

earlier

19
Q

lower self-esteem, more depression, and poorer body image is more common in _____-______ girls than later-maturing girls.

A

early-maturing girls

20
Q

________–_____ boys are more aggressive, lawbreaking, and alcohol-abusing than later-maturing boys.

A

Early-maturing boys

21
Q

_____developing boys tend to be more anxious, depressed, and afraid of sex.

A

Slow

22
Q

____________of iron, calcium, zinc, and other minerals affect bone and muscle growth don’t take and vitamins or minerals. They don’t choose the healthiest foods.

A

Deficiencies

23
Q

________ ________ is a person’s idea of how his or her body looks.

  • One reason for poor nutrition is anxiety about body image.
  • Girls diet partly because boys tend to prefer to date thin girls.
  • Boys want to look taller and stronger, a concern that increases from ages 12 to 17, partly because girls value well-developed muscles in males
A

Body Image

24
Q

Characterized by self-starvation, affected individuals voluntarily under eat and often over exercise, depriving their vital organs of nutrition. Anorexia can be fatal.

A

Anorexia nervosa-

25
Q

Characterized by binge eating and subsequent purging, usually by induced vomiting and/or use of laxatives.

A

Bulimia nervosa-

26
Q

The relatively sudden and rapid physical growth that occurs during puberty.

A

Growth Spurt

27
Q

The parts of the body that are directly involved in reproduction, including the vagina, uterus, ovaries, testicles, and penis.

A

Primary sex characteristics-

28
Q

Physical traits that are not directly involved in reproduction but that indicate sexual maturity, such as a man’s beard and a woman’s breasts.

A

Secondary sex characteristics-

29
Q

Compared to 100 years ago, adolescent sexual development is more hazardous, for five reasons:

  1. Earlier puberty and weaker social taboos mean teens have sexual experiences at younger ages. Early sex correlates with depression and drug abuse.
  2. Most contemporary teenage mothers have no husbands to help them, whereas many teenage mothers a century ago were married.
  3. Raising a child has become more complex and expensive.
  4. Mothers of teenagers are often employed and therefore less available as caregivers for their teenager’s child.
  5. Sexually transmitted infections are more widespread and dangerous.
A

Facts

30
Q

Any erotic activity that arouses an adult and excites, shames, or confuses a child, whether or not the victim protests and whether or not genital contact is involved.

A

Child sexual abuse

31
Q

A disease spread by sexual contact, including syphilis, gonorrhea, genital herpes, chlamydia, and HIV.

A

Sexually transmitted infection (STI)

32
Q

the instinctual and emotional areas develop before the reflective ones do such as….
The __________ -______ (fear, emotional impulses) matures before the _______ _______ (planning ahead, emotional regulation).

A

limbic system & prefrontal cortex

33
Q

When emotions are intense, especially when one is with peers, the logical part of the brain shuts down.

When stress, arousal, passion, sensory bombardment, drug intoxication, or deprivation is extreme, the adolescent brain is overtaken by impulses that might shame adults.

A

Neurological Development Facts

34
Q

Several aspects of adolescent brain development are positive:

-increased mylenation, which decreases reaction time

-enhanced dopamine activity, promoting
pleasurable experiences

-synaptic growth enhances moral development and openness to new experiences and ideas

A

facts