painted wolf
Grey Muzzle
Apparently teens really can't grasp long term concequences of thier actions like adults can. A study done by Dartmouth Professor of Cognitive Science Abigail Baird showed that teens take longer and use different parts of the bran to make such decisions.
Abigail Baird's site here: http://www.theteenbrain.com/latest/
http://www.theteenbrain.com/
should information like this impact the way we teach teens about things like sex, drugs and crime? Perhaps our old methods, (treating teens like small adults or big kids) need to be changed.
wa:do
rest of the article here: http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99996738In Bairds experiment, carried out with colleague Jonathan Fugelsang, teenagers and adults were shown scenarios on a computer screen, such as eating a salad or swimming with sharks. The subjects had to judge whether each was safe or dangerous. Both groups took longer to decide a scenario was dangerous, but this difference was greater in teenagers. Adults took 1.6 seconds longer to reach a decision while teenagers took 1.75 seconds more.
Brain scans taken during the test show that the prefrontal cortex was more active in the teens, suggesting they were making a greater effort to judge the results of each situation. The adults had more basal ganglia activity, pointing to a more automatic response, Baird told a meeting on Law and the Brain at the Institute of Advanced Legal studies, part of University College London, UK, this week.
Abigail Baird's site here: http://www.theteenbrain.com/latest/
http://www.theteenbrain.com/
should information like this impact the way we teach teens about things like sex, drugs and crime? Perhaps our old methods, (treating teens like small adults or big kids) need to be changed.
wa:do