Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Tweens sensitive to others' perceptions of them

Tweens sensitive to others' perceptions of them

July 15, 2009

Young adolescents care a lot about what others think about them. A new study confirms this using brain-mapping techniques that shed new light on this complex period of social development.

The study, published in the July/August 2009 issue of the journal Child Development, is authored by researchers at the University of Oregon and the University of California Los Angeles.




Previous research into this area has relied on reports by teenagers themselves. This study eliminated the potential bias of self-reports by using brain scans to look at the neural systems that support individuals' perceptions of themselves. During the brain scans, 12 early adolescents (11- to 13-year-olds) and 12 young adults (22- to 30-year-olds) responded to researchers' questions about whether short phrases (such as "I am popular") described them, and whether they believed others (mothers, best friends, classmates) thought these phrases described them, too. The researchers then examined activity in the brain that occurred when the participants gave their responses.

In comparison to the young adults, the tweens see themselves in ways that may depend more on what they believe others think about their abilities and attributes. And these others-including parents and friends-may have more influence in some areas than in other areas, with moms having more sway over how the tweens view their academic abilities but best friends exerting influence over how they see their social skills.

"These findings provide a novel form of evidence confirming the sensitivity of adolescents to what they believe others think of them, especially parents and peers," suggests Jennifer H. Pfeifer, assistant professor of psychology at the University of Oregon and the lead author.

"More importantly, they suggest that being able to see others' perspectives on oneself may be particularly critical to development in adolescence. As a result, individuals who lack this social cognitive skill (including those with autism spectrum disorders) may face significant obstacles."

Society for Research in Child Development



Related Social Development Current Events and Social Development News Articles Social Development Current Events and Social Development News RSS Social Development Current Events and Social Development News RSS
New links among alcohol abuse, depression, obesity in young women found
There is new evidence that depression, obesity and alcohol abuse or dependency are interrelated conditions among young adult women but not men.

Rate of teen binge drinking cut more than 1/3 by prevention system
Rates of binge drinking were 37 percent lower among eighth-grade students in communities in seven states that used a prevention system designed to reduce drug use and delinquent behavior compared to teenagers in communities that did not use the system.

Parents play key role in whether teen tobacco use becomes a daily habit
Researchers have found new evidence showing that parents play a key role in whether or not their adolescent children who experiment with tobacco progress to become daily smokers before they graduate from high school.

Challenging conventional wisdom: advances in development reverse fertility declines, says Penn study
A team of researchers at the University of Pennsylvania and the Università Bocconi in Milan have released a study that challenges one of the most established and accepted standards in the social sciences: Human fertility levels tend to decline as countries advance towards high levels of social and economic development.

New theory on why male, female lemurs same size
When it comes to investigating mysteries, Sherlock Holmes has nothing on Rice University biologist Amy Dunham. In a newly published paper, Dunham offers a new theory for one of primatology's long-standing mysteries: Why are male and female lemurs the same size?

Parts of brain involved in social cognition may be in place by age 6
Social cognition-the ability to think about the minds and mental states of others-is essential for human beings. In the last decade, a group of regions has been discovered in the human brain that are specifically used for social cognition.

Who am I? Adolescents' replies depend on others
Ask middle-school students if they are popular or make friends easily, they likely will depend on social comparisons with their peers for an answer. Such reliance on the perceived opinions of others, or reflected self-appraisals, has long been assumed, but new evidence supporting this claim has now been found in the teen brain.

New genetic study of Asperger syndrome, autistic traits and empathy
Scientists from the University of Cambridge have identified 27 genes that are associated with either Asperger Syndrome (AS) and/or autistic traits and/or empathy.

Parental guidelilnes, consequences may be why fewer black teens smoke than whites
It's a curious paradox. Black adults are more likely to smoke than white adults and most smokers start as teenagers. But statistics show that fewer black youths than whites begin smoking as adolescents.

Study helps identify college drinkers who might continue excessive drinking as adults
College students who are problem drinkers using alcohol to cope with personal problems and boost self-confidence are more likely to continue excessive drinking into adulthood, a recent study suggests.
More Social Development Current Events and Social Development News Articles
Social & Emotional Development: Connecting Science and Practice in Early Childhood Settings

Social & Emotional Development: Connecting Science and Practice in Early Childhood Settings
by Dave Riley PhD (Author), Robert San Juan (Author), Joan Klinkner (Author)

Holding babies while feeding them and playing Simon Says with children are important developmental practices that help babies and children form an attachment to their caregiver and regulate their behavior.

With accessible language, this book examines common teaching practices in early childhood programs and the scientific research that supports them. Topics include attachment and exploration, impulse control, and problem-solving.



  Human Development Disability and Social Change
by Societe Canadienne De La Cidih



Social Development

Social Development
by H. Rudolph Schaffer (Author)

This textbook provides an up-to-date account of our knowledge of social development. It is addressed to students of psychology and other social sciences with no or only limited knowledge of child development, and covers an age range up to and including adolescence. The content is organized according to themes, but these themes follow an approximate developmental progression.

The central theme of Social Development is that of socialization - how an essentially biological being becomes transformed into a highly sophisticated social being. Whilst giving full attention to the older and well-established aspects of our knowledge of social development but also to more recent topics such as research on behavior genetics, children's theory of mind, post-infancy attachment development, and...

Social Studies: Ged (Steck-Vaughn Ged Series)

Social Studies: Ged (Steck-Vaughn Ged Series)
by Steck-Vaughn (Author), Steck-Vaughn (Editor)

Jack has always thought of himself as the "big brother". With the birth of baby Rose, there will now be two "big brothers" in the family

Beyond Borders: The New Regionalism in Latin America: Economic and Social Progress in Latin America: 2002 Report (Inter-American Development Bank)

Beyond Borders: The New Regionalism in Latin America: Economic and Social Progress in Latin America: 2002 Report (Inter-American Development Bank)
by Professor Inter-American Development Bank (Author)

Regional integration initiatives have long been part of the world economic landscape. In Latin America, integration flourished in the early post-war era but then lost momentum until the 1990s, when there was a new wave of initiatives ranging from free trade areas to customs unions.

Beyond Borders, this year’s edition of Economic and Social Progress in Latin America, explores the emergence of this "new regionalism." The resurgence of integration has complemented unilateral and multilateral efforts to open up the world economy and become a vital part of Latin America’s structural reform process.

The book examines such dimensions of integration as market access, institutional arrangements, regional infrastructure, financial integration, and macroeconomic and exchange rate...

Social Studies Activities With Rubrics

Social Studies Activities With Rubrics
by Scholastic

Grades 4-6. Students will be hosting a historical dinner party, producing a musical CD based on a history unit and boosting their vocabulary as they play the Ready, Set, Draw vocabulary game. These are only a few of the literacy-rich activities included in 64 page activity book.

VHS Video Tape of THE DEVELOPING CHILD #18 TODDLERHOOD: SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT. 29 minutes.

VHS Video Tape of THE DEVELOPING CHILD #18 TODDLERHOOD: SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT. 29 minutes.
by Magna Systems



  CLASS, SPORTS, AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
by SportsWorkout.com

When Class, Sports, and Social Development was published in 1983 it stood the world of sport sociology on its collective head. The original edition brought social theory to sport studies and signaled sport sociologys coming of age. Gruneau brillia

Social Development Dance

Social Development Dance
Pete Yorn (Primary Contributor)



On Social Interaction and Brain Development video [VHS]

On Social Interaction and Brain Development video [VHS]
Starring: Robert Sylwester



© 2009 BrightSurf.com