Article 1: The Social Re-orientation of Adolescence – A Neuroscience Perspective on the
Process and Its Relation to Psychopathology
Author: Eric E. Nelson, Ellen Leibenluft, Erin B. McClure, and Daniel S. Pine
Core Idea:
This article provides a neurophysiological explanation for changes in social behavior during
adolescence, including sexuality, romantic interests, and increased time spent with peers.
SIPN – Social Information Processing Network
● Changes in adolescent social behavior reflect developmental changes in the SIPN.
● Dysregulation of the SIPN during adolescence may contribute to the development of
mood and anxiety disorders.
● The SIPN consists of three key nodes (as introduced in Lecture 1):
1. Detection Node
■ Responsible for identifying whether a stimulus is social in nature.
2. Affective Node
■ Involves reward/punishment systems that determine whether a
stimulus should be approached or avoided.
■ Assigns emotional significance to the stimulus.
3. Regulation/Cognitive Node
■ Supports theory of mind (understanding the mental states of others),
■ Inhibition (impulse control), and
■ Goal-directed behavior.
■ Involves dorsal and ventral prefrontal cortex (PFC) regions.
Developmental Changes in the SIPN During Adolescence
● Detection Node:
○ No major developmental changes have been documented during
adolescence.
● Affective Node:
○ Undergoes both functional and anatomical reorganization during puberty.
○ These changes alter how adolescents process emotional social stimuli.
○ Behaviorally, this leads to heightened emotional responses to social cues.
● Cognitive-Regulation Node:
, ○ Improvements in inhibitory control (e.g., in go/no-go tasks) typically emerge
during mid-to-late adolescence.
○ These improvements are associated with both functional and morphometric
(structural) brain development.
○ The prolonged developmental window of adolescence allows life experiences
to shape brain structure and function.
Behavioral Changes
● Adolescents show significant changes in social behavior, which reflect underlying
neural changes.
● These are driven by a combination of hormonal shifts, neurodevelopment, and
learning experiences.
Neuroscientific Perspective
● Recent neuroimaging studies identify the brain systems involved in processing social
information.
● This research highlights how these systems change across adolescence.
● Studying these changes can help explain how neural restructuring drives behavioral
transformations.
Connection to Psychopathology
● Disruptions in social behavior are linked to affective disorders such as depression
and anxiety.
● The article suggests a strong relationship between social information processing and
mental health disorders.
Model and Purpose
● While broad and potentially simplistic, the model offers a theoretical foundation.
● Its goal is to enable more refined and empirically grounded future research.
Article 2: Navigating the Social Environment in Adolescence: The Role of Social Brain
Development
Author: Jack L. Andrews, Saz P. Ahmed, and Sarah-Jayne Blakemore
Core idea:
adolescence is a critical period during which the brain regions involved in social cognition,
often called the "social brain", undergo significant development. This neural maturation
supports adolescents’ increasing ability to understand, interpret, and respond to complex
social environments. The study emphasizes how changes in these social brain networks
influence adolescents' social behavior, peer interactions, and sensitivity to social evaluation,
,helping explain why adolescence is a time of heightened social awareness and emotional
reactivity.
Conditions:
● Adolescence spans approximately ages 10–24.
● It is marked by biological, psychological, and social transformations.
Key Findings:
● The adolescent brain undergoes major changes related to social development.
● Teenagers become more sensitive to social evaluation, status, and relationships.
● There is increased activity in brain regions involved in understanding others and
processing social information.
● The social environment strongly influences adolescent thinking, emotions, and
behavior.
Behavioral Changes:
● Greater focus on friendships, social status, and peer acceptance
● Increased sensitivity to rejection and social judgment
● Higher likelihood of risk-taking in social settings (especially in front of peers)
● More self-awareness and identity exploration
Brain Changes:
Increased activity in social brain (which is the network of regions involved in recognizing,
understanding, and interpreting social cues from others) regions, including:
● Medial Prefrontal Cortex (mPFC): Self-reflection and thinking about others
● Temporo-Parietal Junction (TPJ): Perspective-taking
● Superior Temporal Sulcus (STS): Processing social cues like facial expressions
● Amygdala and Striatum: Emotional and reward-related processing
Meaning of These Changes
● Adolescents learn to navigate complex social networks, a crucial skill for adulthood.
● Brain development enhances sensitivity to social influence but also improves
empathy and understanding of social norms.
● This period offers opportunities for social growth, but also poses risks for mental
health problems such as social anxiety or depression.
Gray and White Matter Changes
Gray Matter:
, ● Decreases during adolescence, especially in the prefrontal cortex and social brain
areas.
● This decline is due to synaptic pruning — the removal of unused or inefficient neural
connections.
● Importance:
Pruning increases efficiency and specialization, allowing better processing of social
information like peer intentions and social norms.
White Matter:
● Increases throughout adolescence.
● Reflects myelination, insulating nerve fibers to enable faster communication between
brain areas.
● Importance:
Supports quicker, more coordinated brain activity, especially in areas related to
emotional and cognitive regulation, key for decision-making and self-control.
Conclusion
Adolescence is a period of social and brain development, where skills like mentalizing,
emotion regulation, and resisting peer pressure continue to mature. During this time,
adolescents are more vulnerable to mental health issues, especially when facing social
challenges like peer rejection. Interventions that strengthen prosocial behavior and
emotional regulation, especially in uncertain or risky situations, may help reduce this
vulnerability.
key terms:
Concept What it is Brain regions Role in
involved adolescence
Mentalizing Understanding others’ mPFC, TPJ, Helps with
thoughts and feelings, a part STS navigating
of social cognition friendships,
reputation, social
expectations
Resistance Standing up to peer Prefrontal Balances social
pressure or social norms cortex influence with
(cognitive personal judgment
control), and autonomy
striatum
(reward)
Perspective-Tak The ability to consider the the social brain important for
ing world from another person’s empathy and social
point of view. decision-making