Lecture 3
Part 1 – adolescent cognitive development
Conditional reasoning/propositional logic: Classic Modus Ponens (MP) inference: if p then q
What is cognition?
Cognition: aspects of mind related to the acquisition, modification, and manipulation of knowledge in particular contexts
Cognitive development: changes in how an individual thinks, solves problems, and changes in memory, attention and information processing
Two perspectives in text: Piagetian and Information Processing
Piagetian perspective: focuses on what are the changes that we see all people go to
Information processing perspective: how do we process information? How does this change across time? Based on individual differences.
Textbook: adolescent thinking compared to children differ in (at least) 5 ways
Better at thinking about what is possible
Children: focus on here and now
Better at thinking about what is abstract
More often think about the process of thinking – able to think about how they think about things (metacognition)
Thinking is multidimensional (what persons say, how they say it and what they mean)
Able to see things as relative rather than absolute (not black - white)
Cognitive development during adolescence: a Piagetian perspective
Jean Piaget (1896-1980) Swiss cognitive psychologist
Stage Theory of Cognitive Development (individuals in different stages think differently)
How thinking changes in varies stages of adolescence. Piaget believed that children were active instructors of their knowledge (not only teachers/parents).
Stages | Age | Brief Description |
Sensorimotor | 0–2 | Cog. dev. involves learning how to coordinate activities of the senses with motor activities
|
Preoperational | 2–7 | Capable of representing the world symbolically (e.g. language) |
Concrete Operations | 7–11 | Become more adept at using mental operations which leads to a more advanced understanding of the world
|
Formal Operations | 11–15+ | Allows adolescents to reason about more complex tasks and problems involving multiple variables
|
Cognitive development during adolescence: a Piagetian perspective
Formal operations – final stage of cognitive development
Concrete: discuss world as it is
Formal: as it might be/become
Increase in ability for abstraction/abstract thought, speculation about the future
--> Allows an individual to place their lives in a personal and societal perspective
Needed to: achieve identity, form goals, select an occupation
Adolescent cognitive abilities
Understand impact of: past on present, present on future
How one thing relates to another
Greater capacity to evaluate immediate and long-range costs and benefits
World as might be, ought to be
Formal operations: 4 overlapping logical abilities
Inductive reasoning
Reasoning from specific experiences or observations to a general rule
Examples – rule – induction (ERI)
I enjoy watching Grey's Anatomy, ER, and House... so I must really like medical dramas.
Hypothetical – deductive reasoning
Reason from general rule to specific or new situations
Rule – example – deduction (RED)
i enjoy medical dramas... so if I tried watching Scrubs, I might like that too.
Reflective – recursive thinking
Think about one's own thoughts as if someone else is thinking about them
Meta-cognition: able to think about what we think of something
Inter-propositional Logic
Ability to judge the truth of logical relationships among propositions
It's about the structure, not the content
P1: all elephants are animals
P2: all animals are green
Conclusion: all elephants are green
Reasoning and science
Limitations of Piaget's Theory
Age results vary as a function of the complexity/abstractness of the task and response mode, standards
Piaget interested in competence not performance
Piaget was most interested in learning about what is the maximum capacity that humans are capable of. Formal operations represent that top level of mental capacity. Piaget didn't care if all humans achieved that.
If-then begins at 5 for some fantasy like questions (simplify the test down)
By 10 can show some competence in judging conclusions on familiar topics. After that a monotonic increase but only 50% of adults can get the most difficult questions right
Even in adulthood, people continue to make a number of reasoning errors
“Bounded rationality”: the fact that decisionmakers have three constraints:
(1) only limited, often unreliable, information is available regarding possible alternatives and their consequences, (2) human mind has only limited capacity to evaluate and process the information that is available, and (3) only a limited amount of time is available to make a decision. Therefore even individuals who intend to make rational choices are bound to make satisficing (rather than maximizing or optimizing) choices in complex situations. These limits (bounds) on rationality also make it nearly impossible to draw up contracts that cover every contingency, necessitating reliance on rules of thumb.
Cultural insensitivity
While formal operations may be a universal potential, the form that it takes in each culture may be different from the formal tasks devised by Piaget
Different contexts may require different cognitive requirements
Is there a form of thinking in Holland that differs from countries?
For example:
Sarcasm, metaphors, humor
Information processing perspective improves in 5 areas:
Attention
Improvements in both selective attention and divided attention
Memory
Working memory: info is held for a short time while a problem is being solved
Long-term memory: recall something from a long time ago
Autographic memory: recall of personally meaningful past events
Reminiscence bump: when we get older and we think back, we remember the adolescence period the best
Speed
Adolescents are faster than children at processing information
Increase from 10-late teen years
Organization
Improvements in organizational strategies
Planful
Flexible in strategies
Metacognition
Conclusion
Thus, in general there are profound changes in cognitive abilities during adolescence
This raises the question of why adolescents are such poor decision makers...
Part 2 – theories of adolescent risk taking
Definition of risk taking
Risk taking 1: engaging in behaviors that could potentially lead to negative outcomes (real-world risk taking)
Risk taking 2: choosing an option with the higher outcome variability – that is, the wider range of possible outcomes
Thus, riskier options involve greater uncertainty about the resulting outcome (risky decision making in the lab)
Very old: Elkind's (1967) Imaginary audience and personal fable – links to risk taking
Imaginary audience - adolescent's assumption that his or her preoccupation with personal appearance and behavior is shared by everyone else
Heightened self-consciousness characteristics of early adolescence
Personal fable – follows the imaginary audience
Thinking of himself/herself as the center of attention, the adolescent comes to believe that it is because he or she is special and unique
Gives rise to a sense of
Invulnerability
Specialty
In turn leading to a propensity for behavioral risk-taking
The theory of adolescent egocentrism predicts a curvilinear increase and decrease in adolescent egocentrism between childhood and middle-to-late adolescence
Problems with Elkind's Theory
Current research:
Adolescents do not believe they are invulnerable
Overestimate key risks/negative consequences (lung cancer from smoking, HIV risk, death)
Nevertheless, they engage in risk taking because perceived benefits outweigh risks
New theories
Rational decision-making model (cold cognition)
Cognitive perspective: risk taking = decision making
Identifying options
Assessing the possible consequences of each option (appraisal peaks at 11-13)
Evaluating the desirability of each option
Estimating the probability for each consequence
Applying an algorithm to the above, to identify the greatest subjective utility
Costs and benefits of alternatives and probability (b and d)
Now recognize social benefits
Middle to late adolescents’ decision-making equivalent to adults
In hypothetical, low arousal situations (cold cognitive tasks), alone
Cognitive capacity shapes the process of decision-making
Risk perception equivalent (expect for occasional risky behavior)
Critiques on rational cognitive model
Does risk perception link to risk behavior?
Not always (depends on conditionality)
How likely are you to experience negative consequences from smoking?
Risk takers > non risk takers (all non-smokers)
If you smoked, how likely are consequences?
Risk takers < non risk takers (if risk takers smoked)
Optimistic bias
Reflects need to assess risk perception before engagement in particular behavior.
Experience could alter risk perception
Adolescents have the ability to be rationale, but:
More present oriented
More susceptible to peer pressure
Less able to regulate emotional states
Cold decision making: logical reasoning, information processing
Hot decision making: psychosocial maturity (self regulation), resistance to peer pressure, emotional load
They do not think they are immortal. Overestimate probabilities and overestimate the benefits
Dual process cognitive models
Prototype willingness model
Two ways: prototype vs attitudes & norms: Reasoned pathway (deliberate weighing of costs/benefits) and a social reaction pathway (experiential processing guided by social stereotypes of risk takers) and includes behavioral willingness to engage in risk
Willingness better predictor of risk behavior than intensions during early and middle adolescence, and then it reverses
Focus is on type of processing heuristic vs analytic
Intuition vs reason
Affect vs cognition
Image-based vs rule-based
Social influence vs cognitive influence
Reactive vs reasoned
Prototype: what is our view of people who smoke pot? > cool group? > influences our willingness to engage in that behavior
Fuzzy trace theory
Emphasis on “gist-based” intuitions, derived from experiences
Cognitive maturation entails reasoning and intuition. Using intuitions is more efficient – faster develop through experience
Adolescents take more risks because they are more depending on verbatim reasoning to make a decision than they are in gist-based reasoning.
Verbatim vs gist-based reasoning
Factors in risk taking include mental processes (gist and verbatim) and individual differences (in inhibition and reward sensitivity). Gist processes include the formation of mental representations and the retrieval of stored social values. Verbatim processes underlie the calculation of expected values as reward magnitude multiplied by the probability of obtaining the reward. In the verbatim calculation of expected value, reward sensitivity magnifies the subjective reward magnitude (hence the arrow), and an individual can be more or less sensitive to different classes of reward (some people have a sweet tooth but are indifferent to alcohol). There are generally two classes of inhibition: cognitive which pertains to thought processes and can be unconscious, and response/behavioral, which pertains to the willful suppression of actions.
Gist: essence of the information. When you have the gist of something, you understand it much more quickly than when you have to go through verbatim, costs and benefits et cetera.
Gist of adults: don’t take risks. Adolescents don't have those experiences yet, so they don't have gist.
Shift to gist...
Gist-decision making (fuzzy intentions) reduces risk taking and increases with age and experience
Young people shift from pros and cons to a more categorical gist
Neurodevelopmental imbalance models (hot cognition) - emotion, context and self regulation
Emotions greatly affect decision making
Affects benefits (e.g., lessen social anxiety)
Being including in peer group
Anticipatory emotions
The thrill of passing parental or legal boundaries
Anticipating throwing up after drinking too much
Incidental emotion or background mood, context effects
Everyone is excited about the decision to jump into someone's swimming pool/swim in canal on a hot evening
Jumping off the Munt bridge
Cognitive control system vs socio-emotional reward system
In emotionally arousing hot contexts (e.g., when peers are present), adolescents’ rewards processing systems in the brain become hyper-responsive and override the cognitive control system ultimately leading to heightened adolescent risk taking
Age differences in resistance to peer influence: during mid- and late adolescent period adolescents develop the ability to resist peer influence.
Albert, Chein, & Steinberg (2013)
Approach sensitization hypothesis
Among adolescents more than adults in the presence of peers “primes” a reward-sensitive motivational state that increases the subjective value of immediately available rewards and thereby increases preferences for the short-term benefits of risky choices over the long-term value of safe alternatives
Fundamental assumptions of the model
Emotions affect decision-making
Adolescents exhibit stronger “bottom-up” affective reactivity in response to socially relevant stimuli and peers are highly salient (puberty leads to increase oxytocin receptors)
Adolescents less capable of top-down cognitive control
Mechanisms for peer presence effects on decision making:
Modulating responses to incentive cues, as predicted by the approach-sensitization hypothesis
Reward processing comes in line much more
Disrupting inhibitory control, or
Alerting both of these processes
Stoplight game
Alone or with other sex peers
Run yellow light or go further. Crash? > delay. Goal: reach the endpoint as fast as possible.
Research: adolescents more so than adults take much more risk and have more crashes when they're with peers than when they are in the alone condition.
Adolescents' neural activity during the decision-making epoch showed greater activation of brain structures implicated in reward valuation (ventral striatum and orbitofrontal cortex) in the peer-condition scans relative to the alone-condition scans.
Participants with higher activation reported lower resistance to peer influence
Brain
Prefrontal cortex: subsection of the frontal lobe responsible for advanced functions such as insight, judgment, reasoning and other executive functions
Amygdale: an area involved in emotional processing
Adolescents process information here rather than in prefrontal cortex > can create a tendency to react more impulsively
Limbic system: hypothalamus (HPA & HPG: need more stimulation, stress, risk)
Reward sensitivity – limbic
Self-regulation – prefrontal cortex
Part 3 – adolescent risky decision making and the legal system
Steinberg & Scott (2003) - youths should be treated in a separate justice system
Penal proportionality
Fair criminal punishment is dependent on:
Amount of harm caused or threatened by actor
Blameworthiness of actor
Excuse vs mitigation
Excuse – the defendant bears no responsibility – no punishment
Mitigation – blameworthiness of actor above thresholds of responsibility but below full responsibility – punishment by degree
e.g., the actor who kills intentionally is deemed less culpable where he or she does so without premeditation
One who kills under duress is guilty of manslaughter, not murder
Factors that reduce culpability
Endogenous impairments in decision-making
Mental illness
Mental retardation
Extreme emotional distress
Susceptibility to influence or domination
Extraordinary circumstances
Duress
Provocation
Threatened injury
Out of character
First offense
Remorse
Positive history
Adolescents:
Diminished decision-making capacities
Heightened vulnerability to coercive circumstances
Unformed character
Adolescents are still in search for their identity
Thus
Adolescents dealt with in a different system from adults
Rehabilitation is aim
None are eligible for death penalty
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Adolescence Development - Lectures - Universiteit Utrecht
- Adolescent Development - Universiteit Utrecht
- Physical development, adolescent development- Universiteit Utrecht
- Adolescent cognitive development - Universiteit Utrecht
- Morality - Universiteit Utrecht
- Self and Identity - Universiteit Utrecht
- Family relations - Universiteit Utrecht
- Peers - Universiteit Utrecht
- Adolescents in school - Universiteit Utrecht
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- Love and sex - Universiteit Utrecht
- Alcohol use and delinquency - Universiteit Utrecht
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- Suicide and related problems in adolescence - Universiteit Utrecht
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Adolescence Development - Lectures - Universiteit Utrecht
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