直到最近惦积,人們曾以為人類的大腦在幼兒時期結束時就完全停止發(fā)育了。然而猛频,在過去的十年間狮崩,有研究表明人類的大腦從青春期開始到成年初期的這段時間內(nèi)仍然在變化。
article
What were you like as a teenager? I was a nightmare. I was rude to my parents, always stayed out late, never did my homework, hung out with the wrong people and made lots of bad decisions. Apparently, this is the age when teenagers are out of control and behave badly. Maybe, if you're a teenager now, you think this is unfair criticism or it's not your fault. Well, you might be right!
Experts have found that it's a teenager's brain that is to blame. Between the ages of approximately 13 to 19 - a period known as adolescence - the brain is still developing in areas that control behaviour. This has an impact on learning and multitasking, stress and memory, sleep, addiction, and decision-making. For parents, these consequences often manifestthemselves in a variety of behaviours that they may have previously blamed on hormones or just moodiness.
This is quite a new discovery, according to Professor Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, who, speaking on the BBC radio programme The Life Scientific, says "when I was at university, the dogma in the text books was that the vast majority of brain development goes on in the first few years of life and nothing much changes after mid-childhood. That dogma is completely false."
So our brains are still developing much later than was originally thought. Is this the perfect excuse for teenagers to lounge around and not get their homework done on time? Of course not! According to Professor Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, it's to do with our prefrontal cortex – that's the part of our brain right at the front, just behind the forehead. She says "it’s involved in a whole range of very high-level cognitive tasks such as decision making and planning - we know that this region is undergoing very very large amounts of development during the adolescent years". This is the part of the brain critically involved in planning, and, for a teenager, this hasn't developed yet. So getting organised to do their homework, for example, can come as a bit of a challenge.
I wish I’d known about this because instead of telling my teacher I’d left my homework on the bus or that the dog had eaten it. Now I could say, "Sorry sir, my brain isn’t developed enough for the cognitive task of planning my homework".
vocabulary
nightmare “噩夢”鹿寻,棘手的人或事
hang out with sb. 與某人閑逛
out of control 失控
behave badly 行為不當
adolescence 青春期
multitasking 同時做多件事情
hormone 荷爾蒙
moodiness 情緒多變睦柴,喜怒無常
dogma 教條,武斷的意見
lounge around [laund?] 悠閑度日毡熏,閑逛
prefrontal cortex 前額皮層
cognitive task 認知任務
adolescent 青春期的坦敌,青少年的
critically 極其地
approximately 大約
have an impact on doing 對做某事產(chǎn)生影響
@ manifest
vt: 顯示,表明痢法,呈現(xiàn) =demonstrate
e.g.,Social tensions were manifested in the recent political crisis.
adj: 明白的 =clear
e.g.,His nervousness was manifest to all those present.
n: 貨單狱窘,旅客名單
make sentences
Our journey was a nightmare. First we got stuck in a traffic jam and then our car broke down!
It's critically important that we sign the contract today, otherwise we will lose the business.
We're blaming our son's behaviour on his hormones, it can't be anything else can it?
I've got a day off work today so I'm just going to lounge around and watch TV.
Some businesses feel the pressure to change smoking laws has been driven more by dogma than hard facts.
question
True or false? It's hard for teenagers to get organised because the part of the brain needed to do this is still developing.
answer
True. The prefrontal cortex is the part of the brain critically involved in planning, and, for a teenager, this hasn't developed yet. So getting organised to do their homework, for example, can come as a bit of a challenge.