Adolescent Dev. Flashcards
describe puberty in adolescence
- puberty:
- increase in adrenal and gonadal hormones
- second “critical period” in sexual differentiation
- secondary sex characteristics: breasts, pubic hair, facial hair, larynx enlargement/voice changes
- pubertal growth spurt:
- adolescents attain final 25% of adult height and 50% of adult weight
describe sleep rhythms during adolescent physical development
- sleep rhythms
- phase delay (go to bed later)
- reduced slow wave (restorative) sleep
- negative impact of cell phones/computers on sleep hygiene
describe brain maturation in adolescence
- ongoing myelination and dendritic pruning
- most dramatic changes occur in prefrontal cortex and increased prefrontal-subcortical connectivity
describe cognitive development in adolescence
- ability to use abstract thought, consider theories, devise hypotheses, examine cause & effect (Formal Operational Stage)
- regression to concrete stage of thinking is common under stress or heightened emotions in adolescence
- problem solving, planning, multi-tasking
- inhibiting inappropirate behaviors in favor of goal-oriented behaviors
- impulse control
- delayed gratification
describe changes in gray and white matter in adolescents
describe social/emotional development of adolescents
- adolescents are reward seeking and highly motivated by emotional incentives
- peer approval
- positive sensation-seeking
- novelty seeking
- emotional system matures earlier than prefrontal control system
- high emotional reactivity
- difficulty down-regulating emotional state
- increased risk for affective disorders in adolescence
describe the maturation of prefrontal pathways in adolescents
- control over emotions improves with maturation of prefrontal pathways (uncinate fasciculus) to amygdala (emotion center) and basal forebrain nucleus accumbens (reward processing)
describe risk-taking and brain maturation in adolescence
- risk-taking is higher in adolescence than in childhood and adulthood (non-linear trend)
- cold reasoning (logical, cause-effect relationships, prefrontal region) develops linearly from childhood to adulthood
- hot reasoning (emotional, limbic region) peaks in adolescence
describe Erikson’s stage of psychosocial development between birth and 1 year
- trust vs. mistrust
- if needs are dependably met, infants develop a sense of basic trust
describe Erikson’s stage of psychosocial development between 1-3 years
- autonomy vs shame and doubt
- toddlers learn to exercise will and do things for themselves or they doubt their abilities
describe Erikson’s stage of psychosocial development between 3-6 years
- initiative vs guilt
- preschoolers learn to initiate tasks and carry out plans or they feel guilty about efforts to be independent
describe Erikson’s stage of psychosocial development between 6-12 years
- competence vs inferiority
- children learn the pleasure of applying themselves to tasks or they feel inferior
describe Erikson’s stage of psychosocial development between 12-20s
- identity vs role confusion
- teenagers work at refining a sense of self by testing roles and then integrating them to form a single identity, or they become confused about who they are
describe Erikson’s stage of psychosocial development between 20s-40s
- intimacy vs isolation
- young adults struggle to form close relationships and to gain the capacity for intimate love, or they feel socially isolated
describe Erikson’s stage of psychosocial development between 40s-60s
- generativity vs stagnation
- the middle-aged discover a sense of contributing to the world, such as through family and work, or they feel a lack of purpose