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Class notes The Adolescent Brain (6463PS030Y)

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The Adolescent Brain

Brain
●​ 4 lobes: frontal, parietal, temporal and
occipital
●​ Surface of the cortex: gyrus and sulcus
●​ White matter: bundles of myelinated nerve
cells (axons) connecting grey matter brain
areas, carry nerve impulses
●​ Gray matter: consists of neuronal cell bodies, on the surface of cerebral
cortex and cerebellum and in subcortical
structures (such as; amygdala, nucleus
accumbens, thalamus, hypothalamus,
putamen), decreases during adolescence
(growing up to be an adult, characterized by
puberty, cultural determinants for when
adolescence ends)
●​ Global pattern of brain development; from the back to the front of the
brain
●​ Almost fully developed at the age of 8 but completely developed at the
age of 30, different parts of the brain have
different developmental trajectories; last regions
to develop are the temporal lobe and prefrontal
area


Neuron
●​ Information processing/transmission takes place
●​ Humans have a 100 billion neurons
●​ Linear increase of neurons and myelination of the
cortex until young adolescence; white matter

, keeps increasing until old age, whereas, gray matter peaks earlier in
adolescence and decreases early
●​ Nonlinear decrease of grey matter in adolescence; explained by
synaptogenesis and pruning
●​ Synaptogenesis: increase in synapses
●​ Pruning: elimination of excess synapses
●​ Neuron consists of: myelin, axon, synapse and dendrite
●​ Myelin: fatty insulating substance surrounding axons, enables
optimal/enhanced neurotransmission
●​ Axon: extends from cell body, conducts electrical impulses
●​ Dendrites: branched projections of a neuron that receives electrical
impulses


fMRI
●​ Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging, a special MRI technique to
measure brain activity
●​ MRI lets us observe the brain
structure, while the fMRI lets us
observe different brain functions
(differentiates active parts from
inactive ones)
●​ Measurement of increased blood
flow (more oxygen means more
activity); blood-oxygen level
dependent (BOLD) effect: it is a
relative measure, not absolute
●​ Changing haemoglobin in red blood
cells; magnetic properties of
hemoglobin are measurable

, ●​ Advantages; non-invasive technique, high spatial resolution/low
temporal resolution
●​ EEG; high temporal resolution/low spatial resolution, used for tracking
activation during a long period of time (such as sleep)


Structures
●​ Areas associated with processing rewards; striatum, nucleus accumbens
(primary component in the circuitry of reward), ventromedial prefrontal
cortex
●​ Prefrontal cortex is associated with behavior regulation, medial (MPFC)
and lateral (LPFC) prefrontal cortex
●​ Social brain network; temporoparietal junction (TPJ), posterior superior
temporal sulcus (pSTS) and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC)
●​ Regulation of emotions; the connection between the amygdala and the
prefrontal cortex is important


Experimental designs
●​ When conducting a study using an fMRI, control condition is of vast
importance to differentiate between relevant and irrelevant brain
activation
●​ All stimuli is shown for 2500 milliseconds to have a constant signal
change and to interpret the results more easily; there is a equally lasting
fixation between trials
●​ Many trials are needed, at least 20, but participants need to be engaged
●​ fMRI analysis; number of slices, slice thickness, matrix size, in plane
resolution (voxel/volumetric pixel)


Nelson et al. (2005)
●​ Social information processing network; detection node (first node that
comes into play when in social interactions, early maturation), cognitive
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