In search of explanations for early pubertal timing effects on developmental psychopathology - Ge et al. - Universiteit Utrecht
In search of explanations for early pubertal timing effects on developmental psychopathology
Ge & Ntasuaki, 2009
Abstract
Early puberty maturation has been identified as a potential risk factor for internalizing and externalizing problems during adolescence. Four hypotheses:
Hormonal influence hypothesis predicts that an increase in hormones at puberty leads to increased psychopathology.
Maturation disparity hypothesis focuses on the gap between physical, social and psychological maturation in early matureres that exacts the toll on individuals’ adjustment.
Contextual amplification hypothesis proposes that experiencing early pubertal transition in a disadvantaged context increases the risk for psychopathology.
Accentuation hypothesis maintains that preadolescent vulnerabilities and challenges during early pubertal transition together increase problems.
Adolescents who undergo pubertal maturation earlier than their same-age, same-sex peers are more likely to have a number of detrimental outcomes, including problem behaviors, substance use, and emotional distress in adolescence. This article: describing four hypotheses to explain why early puberty exerts its influence on externalizing and internalizing psychopathologies.
The hormonal influence hypothesis
→ The rise in the adrenal and gonadal hormones at puberty increases risks for developing psychopathologies.
Adrenarche, which typically occurs between ages 6 and 9, refers to the maturation of the HPA-axis. In this period, adrenal androgens begin to rise. There is some evidence that adrenal androgens are related to dominance, depression, and antisocial conduct.
Gonadarche, which begins at ages 9 to 11, involves the maturation of the HPG-axis. Hormones of the HPG-axis, gonadotropins and sex steroids, increase rapidly during pubertal transition. Individual differences in concentration in testosterone and estradiol are related to negative affect, behavior problems, and aggressive tendencies.
What are possible connections with psychopathology?
Pubertal hormones, particularly gonadal hormones, organizing neural circuits in the developing adolescent brain and leading to behavioral consequences.
Pubertal hormones are linked to psychopathology via alternations in stress sensitivity.
Social and environmental factors may mediate the effects of pubertal hormones on behavior (including reactions on physical changes).
Although it is intuitively appealing to directly ascribe the rise of psychopathology at puberty to a surge of hormonal activities, the empirical findings for such a link in humans are fragmented and equivocal. Verifying a direct link requires a rigorous demonstration that puberty-related hormonal changes precipitate the increase in externalizing and internalizing psychopathologies. It is also important for researchers to attend to the confounding nature of hormonal changes, puberty, and age in examining their relations to psychopathology.
The maturation disparity hypothesis
→ It is the gap between physical and psychosocial maturities that places early (physical) maturers at risk for developing psychopathology. Developmental change is sequential: chronologically ordered developmental tasks in childhood must be completed successfully before the transition to adolescence to ensure normative adjustment. Because early maturers experience a briefer prelude to pubertal change than do their peers, they might be less well prepared socially and cognitively for the biological and psychosocial challenges at puberty.
Despite its plausibility, this hypothesis has more often been implied rather than directly tested.
Conceptual difficulty in defining psychological “(im)maturity".
Empirical difficulties in demonstrating such effects, for it requires researchers to show that cognitively and emotionally immature “early bloomers” are at the highest risk for internalizing and externalizing problems.
But also, a fresh look at this hypothesis: portions of the prefrontal cortex that subserve executive functions or self-regulatory control continue to develop well beyond puberty. From this view, the higher rates of psychopathology among early matureres are expected because their slow-developing neurocognitive systems are mismatched with the fast-approaching social and affective challenges at the onset of puberty.
The contextual amplification hypothesis
→ Focus on the interaction effect between puberty processes and social contexts. The rapid biological changes at puberty, coupled with adverse contexts (stressful environment, family conflict etc.), further exacerbate these problems. It is reasoned that contextual circumstances can either facilitate or impede early puberty effects through the opportunities, norms and expectations, and implicit reward and punishment structures that the contexts provide. Adaptation is particularly difficult for children who negotiate an early pubertal transition in a stressful social environment because new challenges at the entry to puberty and a widening array of social stressors may overtax their relatively undeveloped coping resources.
Studies
Risks of girls’ early maturation could arise particularly in mixed-sex contexts because their sensitivity to peer norms and pressures from boys is heightened at puberty. Residing in a disadvantaged neighborhood, where opportunities for involvement in delinquent activities are abundant and collective supervision is lacking due to deteriorating informal social control, also places early matureres at risk for deviant peer association and externalizing behavior.
Better methodological design and statistics are required to tease apart the complex web of effects of intertwined factors: stressful life events, family adversities, deviant peers, lack of parental supervision and harsh parenting, school and neighborhood conditions.
The accentuation hypothesis
→ Demanding life transitions characterized by high novelty, ambiguity, and uncertainty tend to accentuate previous emotional and behavioral difficulties during those periods. This is because transitional events call forth an individually coherent and consistent way of approach and response that is likely to reveal each person's most salient disposition.
Studies
Girls with prepubertal behavior problems display even more norm-violating behaviors in adolescence if they experience early menarche.
Early maturers with maladaptive stress responses manifested higher levels of subsequent depression than did youth without such personal vulnerabilities.
Challenges with this hypothesis:
Rigorous examination of this hypothesis requires a longitudinal design based on a large representative sample.
Selecting right measures of existing dispositional vulnerabilities requires considerable conceptual understanding as well as methodological sophistication.
Additional issues: sex and racial/ethnic differences
Early maturation effects have been consistently observed for girls but the results are mixed for boys.
In adolescence, girls are more likely than boys to manifest internalizing psychopathology, while boys show more externalizing problems.
Girls and boys undergo different hormonal changes at puberty.
The two sexes differ in the sequence, timing and manifestation of growth in primary and secondary sex characteristics, weight and height, as well as in body composition.
There are racial/ethnic differences in rates of physical maturation.
Conclusion
The four emerging explanations discussed in this article provide a conceptual basis for further studies of explanatory mechanisms. While these explanations offer many new challenges, they also hold the promise of exciting and innovative research characterized by integration across different fields, both within psychology and across disciplines. Although each of these explanations emphasizes a single dimension, they are by no means independent of each other, and they can help piece together the web of pathways from pubertal timing to developmental psychopathology. Not only will the examination of these hypotheses help explain developmental challenges uniquely faced by early maturers, they will also provide mental health practitioners with possible social and cognitive avenues to preventing early maturing children from developing internalizing and externalizing psychopathology.
Join with a free account for more service, or become a member for full access to exclusives and extra support of WorldSupporter >>
Adolescent Development - Artikelen - Universiteit Utrecht
- The new life stage of emerging adulthood at ages 18-29 years: implications for mental health - Arnett et al. - Universiteit Utrecht
- Theory of suicide and effects of school-based suicide prevention interventions - Barzilay et al. - Universiteit Utrecht
- In search of explanations for early pubertal timing effects on developmental psychopathology - Ge et al. - Universiteit Utrecht
- Moral identity: what is it, how does it develop, and is it linked to moral action? - Hardy et al. - Universiteit Utrecht
- Microaggressions and depressive symptoms in sexual minority youth - Kaufman et al. - Universiteit Utrecht
- Less guilty by reason of adolescence - Steinberg et al. - Universiteit Utrecht
- Summary with Chapter 6: Adolescents by Valkenburg - 2017
- Sexting within adolescents’ romantic relationships - Van Ouytsel et al. - Universiteit Utrecht
Contributions: posts
Spotlight: topics
Adolescent Development - Artikelen - Universiteit Utrecht
Samenvattingen van de artikelen van het vak 'Adolescent Development' 2020-2021
Online access to all summaries, study notes en practice exams
- Check out: Register with JoHo WorldSupporter: starting page (EN)
- Check out: Aanmelden bij JoHo WorldSupporter - startpagina (NL)
How and why use WorldSupporter.org for your summaries and study assistance?
- For free use of many of the summaries and study aids provided or collected by your fellow students.
- For free use of many of the lecture and study group notes, exam questions and practice questions.
- For use of all exclusive summaries and study assistance for those who are member with JoHo WorldSupporter with online access
- For compiling your own materials and contributions with relevant study help
- For sharing and finding relevant and interesting summaries, documents, notes, blogs, tips, videos, discussions, activities, recipes, side jobs and more.
Using and finding summaries, notes and practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter
There are several ways to navigate the large amount of summaries, study notes en practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter.
- Use the summaries home pages for your study or field of study
- Use the check and search pages for summaries and study aids by field of study, subject or faculty
- Use and follow your (study) organization
- by using your own student organization as a starting point, and continuing to follow it, easily discover which study materials are relevant to you
- this option is only available through partner organizations
- Check or follow authors or other WorldSupporters
- Use the menu above each page to go to the main theme pages for summaries
- Theme pages can be found for international studies as well as Dutch studies
Do you want to share your summaries with JoHo WorldSupporter and its visitors?
- Check out: Why and how to add a WorldSupporter contributions
- JoHo members: JoHo WorldSupporter members can share content directly and have access to all content: Join JoHo and become a JoHo member
- Non-members: When you are not a member you do not have full access, but if you want to share your own content with others you can fill out the contact form
Quicklinks to fields of study for summaries and study assistance
Main summaries home pages:
- Business organization and economics - Communication and marketing -International relations and international organizations - IT, logistics and technology - Law and administration - Leisure, sports and tourism - Medicine and healthcare - Pedagogy and educational science - Psychology and behavioral sciences - Society, culture and arts - Statistics and research
- Summaries: the best textbooks summarized per field of study
- Summaries: the best scientific articles summarized per field of study
- Summaries: the best definitions, descriptions and lists of terms per field of study
- Exams: home page for exams, exam tips and study tips
Main study fields:
Business organization and economics, Communication & Marketing, Education & Pedagogic Sciences, International Relations and Politics, IT and Technology, Law & Administration, Medicine & Health Care, Nature & Environmental Sciences, Psychology and behavioral sciences, Science and academic Research, Society & Culture, Tourisme & Sports
Main study fields NL:
- Studies: Bedrijfskunde en economie, communicatie en marketing, geneeskunde en gezondheidszorg, internationale studies en betrekkingen, IT, Logistiek en technologie, maatschappij, cultuur en sociale studies, pedagogiek en onderwijskunde, rechten en bestuurskunde, statistiek, onderzoeksmethoden en SPSS
- Studie instellingen: Maatschappij: ISW in Utrecht - Pedagogiek: Groningen, Leiden , Utrecht - Psychologie: Amsterdam, Leiden, Nijmegen, Twente, Utrecht - Recht: Arresten en jurisprudentie, Groningen, Leiden
JoHo can really use your help! Check out the various student jobs here that match your studies, improve your competencies, strengthen your CV and contribute to a more tolerant world
1481 |
Add new contribution