Title: Inside the Teenage Brain!!!
1Inside the Teenage Brain!!!
2Who Am I?
- Ph. D. student at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison - Affiliated with the Psychology department and the
Waisman Center - Work in the Child Emotion Lab
3Child Emotion Lab
- Studies of typical and atypical child development
with a focus on the effects of early experience - Im working on an fMRI study of social stress
investigating differences in the response of
children and adults
4Talk Outline
- Brief explanation of Magnetic Resonance Imaging
(MRI) - What have we learned from MRI about the teenage
brain? - How do the findings about the brain relate to
teenage behavior?
5Magnetic Resonance Imaging
6Types of Imaging
- Structural MRI
- Identify which parts of the brain are white
matter, grey matter, and Cerebrospinal fluid
(CSF) - Functional MRI (fMRI)
- Identify which parts of the brain are involved in
a task - The regions with higher levels of oxygen in the
blood are considered to be involved
7Structural Imaging
8Neurons Basic Building Blocks of the Brain
9Neurons to Matter
1 BILLION!!!
10Structural
11Functional Imaging (fMRI)
12Red blood cells carry oxygen
13Functional
14(No Transcript)
15Why Study Teenagers
- Any parent can tell you teenagers are different
from children and also different from adults - The emergence of most psychiatric disorders
occurs in the teenage years
16What can MRI tell us about the Teenage Brain?
17National Institute of Mental Health Study of
Normal Brain Development
- Dr. Jay Giedd, Child Psychiatrist
- Frontline Inside the Teenage Brain
- Began in the late-1990s
- Ongoing
- Structural scans of healthy, typically developing
children and adolescents - How it started
- Scans repeated every 2 years
- Longitudinal vs. Cross-Sectional
- Age range 5-25
18Everyones Brain is Different!
19(No Transcript)
20Volume
- By age 6 the brain is 95 of adult size
- Peak in size occurs between 11 and 15
- Size varied by 50 within typical sample
- Bigger isnt better No relationship between IQ
and size - (Giedd, 2008)
21White Matter
- Can be thought of as Telephone wires of the
brain - Amount increases throughout teenage years
- Faster Connections
Lenroot Giedd et al., 2006
22Grey Matter
- Peaks between 11 and 12 years (around time of
onset of puberty) - Declines throughout teenage years
- Decline is associated with improvement in
cognitive abilities - (Giedd, 2008)
23If we consider a literary/linguistic metaphor,
maturation would not be the addition of new
letters but of combining earlier formed letters
into words, and then words into sentences, and
then sentences into paragraphs. Dr. Jay Giedd,
2008
24General Pattern of Brain Maturation Throughout
Adolescence
White Matter
- Brain with fewer connections
- Brain is quicker and more efficient
Grey Matter
BUT
There are IMPORTANT Regional Differences in the
Pattern
25Limbic System
- Limbic system
- AKA, Emotion Circuitry
- Emotion
- Arousal
- Appetitive stimuli
- Risky Behavior
- Maturation influenced by hormones
- Different for boys and girls
- Igniting the Passions!
26Prefrontal Cortex (PFC)
- Behaviors Related to PFC
- Planning, organinzing, and Perserverence
- Impulse Control
- Self-monitoring and Internal Supervision
- Problem Solving, Critical Thinking Forward
Thinking - Judgment, Learning from Experience and mistakes
27PFC-Limbic Systems
28(No Transcript)
29Adolescent Behavior ?
Casey et al., 2008
30Some Support(Eschel et al., 2007)
- Gambling task with children, teenagers, and
adults - In teenagers
- Reward processing regions responds like that of
adults - Less PFC activity than adults
31Things to Keep in Mind
- Structural and functional MRI are relatively new
research techniques - Functional MRI was only discovered in 1990
- Relationship between brain and behavior still
unclear, especially in kids and adolescents - Not all adolescent behavior can be explained by
an immature prefrontal cortex - There is A LOT of inter-individual variability in
both brain and behavior
32So How Can Brain Science Inform Practice?
- We now know that the brain is undergoing MAJOR
changes until the mid-twenties! - It is likely that Adolescence is just as
important as birth to 3 - Brain changes in this period are correlated with
improvements in cognitive abilities