Received 4 October 2007; accepted 16 January 2008.
Refers to article:
Adolescent Brain Development: Forging New Links?
, 13 February 2008
Elizabeth R. McAnarney
Journal of Adolescent Health
April 2008 (Vol. 42, Issue 4, Pages 321-323) Full Text |
Full-Text PDF (206 KB)
Abstract
Few parents of a teenager are surprised to hear that the brain of a 16-year-old is different from the brain of an 8-year-old. Yet to pin down these differences in a rigorous scientific way has been elusive. Magnetic resonance imaging, with the capacity to provide exquisitely accurate quantifications of brain anatomy and physiology without the use of ionizing radiation, has launched a new era of adolescent neuroscience. Longitudinal studies of subjects from ages 3–30 years demonstrate a general pattern of childhood peaks of gray matter followed by adolescent declines, functional and structural increases in connectivity and integrative processing, and a changing balance between limbic/subcortical and frontal lobe functions, extending well into young adulthood. Although overinterpretation and premature application of neuroimaging findings for diagnostic purposes remains a risk, converging data from multiple imaging modalities is beginning to elucidate the implications of these brain changes on cognition, emotion, and behavior.
Brain Imaging Unit, Child Psychiatry Branch, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland
Address correspondence to: Jay N. Giedd, M.D., Chief, Brain Imaging Unit, Child Psychiatry Branch, NIMH, Building 10, Room 4C110, 10 Center Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892.