Adolescence and early adulthood
(Age 12-25)
Adolescence: Physical
- Growth:
- growth spurts (10-11 inches in height, 50-75 pounds)
- sex differences (starts age 10 for females, 12.5 for males)
- Brain Development:
- synaptic pruning in cerebral cortex
- myelination increases
- Prefrontal Cortex – still not fully developed (executive functioning, inhibition not as strong as in adults)
Hormones & Puberty
- Hormones drive body growth and maturation of sexual characteristics
- GH and Thyroxine promote growth spurt
- Sex differentiation
-
- Testes: Androgens such as testosterone
- Ovaries: Estrogen / Progesterone
- Everyone has both, gonads just produce a lot of one
- Hormones (and nutrition, culture, SES, etc) determine
- Primary sex characteristics: reproductive organs
- Secondary sex characteristic: visible changes elsewhere
- Puberty timing, the age at which uberty occurs
Puberty and sex
- Minor differences compared to other primates
- Male sex (~13.5 years)
- enlargement of testes, prostate gland, seminal vesicles, scrotum, spermarche (development of sperm)
- More muscle, wider shoulders
- Female sex (~12.5 years)
- Breast devlope, menarche (first menstration)
- More fat, wider hips
- Intersex (depends)
- intersex individuals may exhibit normal development depending on there gonads, a partial/mixed puberty, or no puberty
Puberty and gender
- Sex only refers to gonads, gender refers to a social role
- but, sex characteristics are often gendered
-
Gender dysphoria can be treated with...
- Puberty blockers
- Hormone therapy
- Sometimes plastic surgery
-
Gender dysphoria can be treated with...
- Early adolescence: rigid and stereotyped understanding of gender roles
- Late adolescence: with confidence in identity, more flexiblity in gender performance
Eating disorders
- Body dysmorphia - Obsession with some aspect of one's own body being flawed
-
Anorexia Nervosa
- Extremely restricted eating and unwillingness to maintain a healthy body weight often due to intense fear of weight gain
- Can stop menstruation in females. The most fatal mental disorder, with a 10% mortality rate
-
Bulimia Nervosa
- Mix of binging and purging behavior
- Specific health risks depend on type of binging/purging
- Usually a normal body weight
- Binge Eating Disorder & Purging Disorder
Physical Development in Early Adulthood
- Bodily growth subsides by late teens, met with slowing metabolism
- Athletic skills peak between 20 and 35
- Responsibility for maintaining own health and fitness
- Societal factors Bronfrenbrenners bioecological systems model
- Impacts of SES & Education
Early Adulthood- Physical considerations
- Genetic level
- Protective "cap" on DNA known as telomeres gradually shortens
- Highly reactive free radicals molecules destroy DNA, proteins and fats
- from oxidized molecules, esp in fats, meats and alcohol
- mitigated by fruits/veggies
- Cross-linkage theory- protein fibers in the body gradually connect to eachother and become less elastic
- Fertility peaks - more rapid decline for uterus and ovaries due to difficulty
- Increase use of substances
- Increased risk of STIs
Adolescence & Cognition
Formal Operational Stage
- From 11 onward, children develop abstract, systematic, and scientific thinking.
- No longer require concrete objects/events to engage in thought
- Children can engage in generative internal reflection
Adolescence & Cognition
Hypothetico-deductive reasoning
- The ability to generate hypotheses and deduce logical inferences
- "If A is true and B is true, C must be true"
- Using hypotheses, can systematically isolate & combine variables
- Propositional Thought- can evaluate logic of verbal statements unconnected to real-world experiences
(Inductive reasoning is present in concrete operational phase. Is the reverse, "XYZ are true, so A is likely true")
Deductive reasoning is ancient (eg Aristotle)
Adolescence & Cognition
Hypothetico-deductive reasoning example
Pendulum Problem
Limitations of Piaget
- Many well-educated adults still fail some formal operational tasks
- Exposure to tasks, similar issues as testing bias
- This stage is absent in some tribal or village societies
- No strong connection to puberty and other adolescent milestones
Do we know what we're talking about?
Cognitive legacies of adolescence
- Self-consciousness and sensitivity to public criticism: "imaginary audience"
- Self-focusing: "personal fable"
- Domains of rationality
Early Adulthood Cognition
- Brain Development
- Frontol lobe
- Pruning and myelination
- experience-depndant brain growth
-
Epistemic Cognition stages (Perry 1981) - how do we form ideas and beliefs from new knowledge/reflections?
-
Dualistic Thinking
- Information divided into strict categories (right/wrong, we/they, this/that)
-
Relativistic Thinking
- All knowledge is embedded in thought/context. Multiple truths
-
Commitment within Relativistic Thinking
- Synthesis of multiple views/perspectives
-
Dualistic Thinking
Early Adulthood Cognition
- Pragmatic Thought (Labouvie-Vief 1980) - Shift to applying logic to real-life problems
-
Cognitive-Effective Complexity- awareness of emotions and coordinating them with thought
- Tolerance and open-mindedness
- Emotional self regulation
- Thinking impartially
- (Lost in late adulthood)
The College Experience
- Correlated with:
- better reasoning skills
- broadening of attitudes/values
- ability to compare beleifs
- freater self-understanding and sense of identity
- higher self-esteem
How much of this is thanks to college?
Vocational (career) choice
- Gottfredson (2005) and Super (1990) - stages of vocational development:
- Fantasy Period: childhood
- Career preferences guided by familiarity, glamor, and excitement
- Tentative Period: adolescence
- Preferences guided by interests and then abilities and values
- Realistic Period: late adolescence – early adulthood
- Preferences guided by economic and practical realities
- First step (exploration) - Final step (crystallization)
- Narrowing of specialty
Bio/Cog in Adolescence & Early Adulthood
By cypurr
Bio/Cog in Adolescence & Early Adulthood
- 144