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Explaining teen tantrums

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  • Explaining teen tantrums

    Link....

    It's not fair: Brains may compel teens to tantrum

    Teenage tantrums are the stuff of every parent’s nightmares. Now we may closer to explaining why some adolescents fly off the handle more than others. Brain scans show differences in the brain structures that control emotions in adolescents who flare up at the slightest provocation, and those who are more self-controlled.

    Nicholas Allen at the University of Melbourne, Australia, and his colleagues studied 137 boys and girls aged between 11 and 14 and their parents. They videotaped the families while they discussed problems designed to prompt disagreement, such as negotiating bedtime or a curfew.

    There was a huge variation in behaviour, with some families barely speaking to each other, and others getting on well.

    Next the team scanned the children’s brains, focusing on three regions: the amygdala, which triggers impulsive reactions to emotional situations, and the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) – pre-frontal parts of the brain involved in more thoughtful and reflective responses.

    Children of both sexes who behaved more aggressively during the problem-solving tasks had bigger amygdalas, while boys who had smaller ACCs on the left side of the brain, compared with the right, stayed aggressive for longer. Also, boys with smaller OFCs on the left side were more likely to respond to a parent’s sulky behaviour with a sulk of their own.
    Psychiatric problems

    In the more aggressive children, “the ‘thinking’ prefrontal cortex just isn’t exerting enough control over the amygdala to regulate behaviour”, says team member Sarah Whittle.

    While some girls had similar asymmetries in their pre-frontal regions, this did not seem to affect their behaviour, even if they were aggressive. This suggests that the brain mechanisms controlling emotion and behaviour in early adolescence are different for boys and girls, the team says.

    Whittle adds that the brain structures observed in aggressive boys could reflect a temporary delay in the transition to a more adult brain, as the pre-frontal circuits have yet to come fully online.

    But in adults, a bigger amygdala and clear asymmetries in the volume of the ACC and OFC are associated with many psychiatric disorders, including depression, anxiety and personality disorders. It is possible, the team speculates, that in some people the pre-frontal circuits never fully come online, increasing their risk of psychiatric problems.

    Journal reference: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0709815105)
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    Good friends of ours have a daughter approaching her teens. She is pretty bright, but is becoming ever more jekyll/hyde. I've never witnessed more than mild disobedience, but on her own, well the phrase 'living with Satan' has been used lately she's taken to punching and kicking apparently. Yet a nicer set of parents you couldn't hope to meet.
    Maybe she needs elastic bands on certain parts of her brain.
    FT.

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    • #3
      Saw a similar change in a neighbors girl. She was smart, kind and very respectful until she turned 12, at which time she turned into a 5' tall Tasmanian Devil

      Turns out she was on a build-up to starting her periods. Once she had the first one she tamed way down, save for the usual PMS time frame. Even that is about 10% of her attitude before her cycle started.

      We were lucky in that our daughter made a much smoother transition.
      Dr. Mordrid
      ----------------------------
      An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

      I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

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