final pt 4 Flashcards

1
Q

3 phases of adolescence

A
  1. early: (11-14) rapid pubertal changes
  2. middle: (14-16) puberty nearly complete
  3. late: (16-18) achieves adult appearance, assumes adult roles
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2
Q

What is the biological sequence of puberty?

A
  • first sign: RAPID growth spurt
  • hands + legs grow first, then torso
    Girls: 10-16, hips broaden, gain more fat
    Boys: 12-17, shoulders broaden, longer legs, more muscle
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3
Q

Primary vs secondary sex characteristics

A

P: reproductive organs (ovaries, testies)
S: body odor, hair, breast growth, voice deepening

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4
Q

What are influences on the timing of puberty?

A
  • heredity
  • nutrition
  • exercise
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5
Q

Early and late maturation for girls and boys

A

Early (girls): teasing, sexual activity, eating disorders, substance use
Last (girls): may create anxiety, social comparison
Early (boys): popular, positive body image, confidence, stress from too mature relationships
Late (boys): difficult especially with athletics

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6
Q

Secular trend in menarche in industrialized countries

A
  • happening earlier and earlier
  • due to increase in modern medicine, industrialization, access to food
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7
Q

Changes that occur in the brain during adolescence? Cognitive and social/emotional consequences of these changes?

A
  • prefrontal cortex is going through RAPID growth + development (pruning, myelination of pathways)
  • social emotional network outpaces cognitive network
  • abstract thinking, more intense emotions, peer influence, identity formation, struggle w/ emotional regulation
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8
Q

Describe teenager’s health

A
  • at risk for injuries due to risk taking behaviors (underdeveloped prefrontal cortex)
  • common for experimentation with alcohol and drugs
  • high risk of fatal accidents, suicides, homicides
  • sleep deprivation due to biological changes, irregular schedules
  • healthy nutrition behaviors decrease with age
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9
Q

T/F: most teenagers are obese

A

TRUE - 12%

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10
Q

Adolescent contraceptive use

A
  • adolescents at high risk for STDs
  • limited knowledge, inconsistent access to healthcare
  • don’t discuss with parents due to fear/embarrassment
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11
Q

Anorexia nervosa vs bulimia nervosa

A

AN: refusal to eat, excessive exercise, fear of gaining weight, low weight, fatigue, thin hair, amenorrhea
BN: binge eating & purging, damage to GI system, guilt/shame

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12
Q

Formal operational thought stage

A
  • abstract thinking
  • forming theories about everything
  • question values you grew up with
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13
Q

What Piagetian tasks are used to test for formal operational thought?

A
  • hypothetical-deductive reasoning: start w/ hypothesis & deduce logical inferences
    1. Pendulum problem: what will impact how long it takes the string to go back + forth
    2. Balance scale problem: will the scale balance or not
  • Propositional thought: ability to evaluate logic of statements without referring to real world circumstances (ex: mice are bigger than elephants)
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14
Q

Does everyone reach formal operational thought?

A
  • schools is a major contributor if you’re able to contribute or not (calculus, physics)
  • even adults may fail some of the tests sometimes
  • rural/tribal societies aren’t as used to that type of abstract thinking
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15
Q

What are some consequences of adolescent cognitive changes?

A
  • idealism/criticism of the world (generational conflict)
  • poor planning & decision making
  • choose short term goals over long term
  • risky behavior (peer pressure)
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16
Q

Adolescent egocentrism

A
  • self focusing & hyper ware of oneself
  • sensitive to public criticism
  • think everyone is paying attention to them
17
Q

Personal fable

A

“I’m so special and unique”

18
Q

Invincibility fable

A

“Nothing bad will happen”
- why they take risks

19
Q

Imaginary audience

A

“Everyone is watching”

20
Q

Are there gender differences in mental abilities &
achievement? Why?

A