Dear All,
The Faculty of Cognitive Psychology, ELTE is pleased to invite you all for
the upcoming lecture of Cognitive Seminar (
https://sites.google.com/site/eltekognitiv/home/elte-kognitiv-szeminariu
<https://sites.google.com/site/eltekognitiv/home/elte-kognitiv-szeminarium>)
by:
Ilona Kovács (Hungarian Academy of Sciences – Pázmány Péter Catholic
University Adolescent Development Research Group, Budapest, webpage
<https://btk.ppke.hu/karunkrol/intezetek-tanszekek/pszichologiai-intezet/tanszekek-szervezeti-egysegek/altalanos-lelektani-tanszek/oktatoink/kovacs-ilona>
):
BETA: Biological and Experience-based Trajectories in Adolescent brain
development
date: 22nd January 2019, 14:00
place: room 403, Institute of Psychology ELTE, 46 Izabella street,
Budapest, 1064
Abstract:
The adolescent brain continues to mature well into the 20s, with neural
circuitry underlying executive functions among the last to mature. On the
other hand, there is no consensus with respect to the developmental pace of
other different cognitive functions. A usual pitfall of adolescent studies
is that individual differences in puberty onset times are difficult to take
into consideration against chronological age. The variability between
individuals in the timing of the onset and in the pace of progression of
puberty is very large, and the onset age can vary by as much as 6 years in
typical development. There is a great uncertainty in both cross-sectional
and longitudinal studies about the sheer contribution of genetically
preprogrammed maturation versus experience.
The BETA (Biological and Experience-based Trajectories in Adolescent brain
development) project aims to dissociate biological and chronological age
for the first time, and to investigate their role independently in
adolescent cognitive functioning and in the development of large-scale
functional cortical networks. We assess biological maturity of a large
sample of children and adolescents by a computerized estimation of their
bone age, and then we select two cohorts of subjects for further
investigations. Subjects are at the same biological maturity level, however
different in chronological age in the “experience” cohort.
In the “maturation” cohort, subjects are the same age, but they are
different in maturity (or bone-age). We show that biological maturation as
estimated by bone age and life-time experience related to chronological age
are dissociable factors in adolescent brain development, and that their
exact role is different depending on the studied developmental event.