Unravelling brain activity that drives impulsive behaviour in teens
February 23rd, 2010 - 4:07 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, Feb 23 (ANI): A new study by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh suggests that internal and environmental factors trigger unique brain activity in teens that leads them to engage in impulsive, self-indulgent, or self-destructive behaviour.
According to lead researcher Bita Moghaddam, a professor in the Department of Neuroscience in Pitt’s School of Arts and Sciences, this study is a starting point in mapping the neural path from stimuli to behaviour in the adolescent brain.
Moghaddam said: “Adolescence is a period of volatility and vulnerability with tendencies toward interpersonal conflict, emotional reactivity, and risk behavior, but we know very little about the brain mechanisms that promote this state.
“We want to know how the adolescent brain interacts with the environment at the brain-cell level, when the neural signals are firing. Once we identify how certain factors trigger teenage behavior, we might better understand-and possibly address-the origin of the risk taking and psychological disorders such as depression and schizophrenia that occur during this period.”
For the study, the scientists trained adolescent and adult rats to respond to a visual light cue by rewarding them with sugar pellets. Previous studies have shown that adolescent rats and mice exhibit behavioural differences from adults similar to those of adolescent humans, including greater impulsiveness, impatience, and vulnerability to psychological problems, the authors wrote. The rats were placed in front of three holes with the light behind the middle hole. If a rat poked its nose into the center hole when the light was activated, it received a pellet; if it explored the right or left hole, it got nothing. The researchers found that the adolescents responded to the light cue at least as readily as adult rats, suggesting a similar or slightly better capacity for learning.
After six days, the rats were no longer given a reward for choosing the center hole. They were divided into four test groups, each with an equal number of adults and adolescents - rats that were given 20 percent less food between sessions and received the light cue; rats that received the light cue but could eat as much as they liked between sessions; a group that received less food and no light cue; and a group that could eat between sessions but was not shown the light cue during the experiments.
Moghaddam and her colleagues discovered that adolescents returned to the center hole far more often than the adults even though they received no reward and continued going to the hole long after the adult rats stopped altogether. Such doggedness was even more prominent in adolescents who received the light cue and had a restricted diet before the experiment. This group nosed the center hole 30 times, twice as often as adults under the same circumstances and as adolescents with less food and no light cue. Adolescents that received the cue and had free access to food made for the center hole only a third as often.
Thus, rats experiencing internal and external stimuli-hunger and the light cue-compulsively sought the earlier reward long after the other rats realized it no longer existed.
Moghaddam pointed out that these results suggest human teenagers can similarly behave irrationally and compulsively when faced with certain feelings and settings.
She said: “A scenario could range from the relatively mundane, such as hungry teenagers being more likely than adults to buy fast food immediately after seeing an advertisement, to despair and relationship problems eliciting thoughts of suicide.”
The study has appeared in Behavioral Neuroscience.
Pitt neuroscience doctoral student David Sturman was the report’s lead author, conducting the study with Moghaddam and Pitt research assistant Daniel Mandell. The project was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health. (ANI)
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Tags: adolescent brain, adult rats, bita, brain activity, brain cell, brain mechanisms, center hole, destructive behaviour, emotional reactivity, environmental factors, impulsive behaviour, impulsiveness, interpersonal conflict, middle hole, neural signals, psychological disorders, psychological problems, rewa, risk behavior, teenage behavior