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Way, way more than in the brains of adults and children. And all of this activity in the brain’s reward center, it may actually serve a purpose. “We asked teenagers to come to the lab and we scanned their brains while they performed a learning task. They were shown a picture of a butterfly and two flowers and they were asked to guess which flower the butterfly would land on.” After each guess, they were given feedback. When the teens got it right, their striatum would get really, really active. “They would learn over time that the butterfly preferred one flower over the other — and everybody learned this, but what we found is that the adolescents learned it more quickly than adults and with greater accuracy.” So having this reward center that’s hyperresponsive to feedback actually helps teenagers learn from their environment.
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But this same region of the brain is also connected to risk-taking data from Adriana’s lab suggests that teens with a more reactive striatum are more likely to engage in risky behavior and to enjoy it. “Rather than ask how you keep your teenager from taking risks — because we know the brain is really oriented towards risk during this time — it’s better to ask, ‘How do I provide opportunities for healthy risks?'” Like trying out for the school play, even if you’ve never acted before. Or asking someone out on a date. Those are real risks to a teenager, but they’re not the kind of risks that parents typically worry about. “It makes sense from an evolutionary perspective that there’s a time in life when teens want to become more independent, seek out new opportunities. In the animal world, this would translate into looking for new food resources or foraging behavior and in teenagers it often manifests as risk-taking behavior and simply moving away from a family unit.” Teenagers are gonna make mistakes, but they’ve got this brain that’s encouraging them to learn and explore and push boundaries. “So adolescence is a really special time and I think we don’t appreciate enough their energy and their ability to lead and to motivate and how excitable they find life in a way that we maybe — maybe we don’t later in life.” Our brains keep changing throughout our lives and researchers at UC Berkeley are learning that if you give people a little bit of power it can have a big effect on the brain.
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