Teen Brains Over-Process Rewards, Suggesting Root of Risky Behavior, Mental Ills
[Source: PhysOrg.com] 
University of Pittsburgh researchers  have recorded neuron activity in adolescent rat brains that could reveal  the biological root of the teenage propensity to consider rewards over  consequences and explain why adolescents are more vulnerable to drug  addiction, behavioral disorders, and other psychological ills.
The team reports in the Journal of Neuroscience that electrode  recordings of adult and adolescent brain-cell activity during the  performance of a reward-driven task show that adolescent brains react to  rewards with far greater excitement than adult brains. This frenzy of  stimulation occurred with varying intensity throughout the study along  with a greater degree of disorganization in adolescent brains. The  brains of adult rats, on the other hand, processed their prizes with a  consistent balance of excitation and inhibition.
The extreme difference in brain activity provides a possible  physiological explanation as to why teenagers are more prone than adults  to rash behavior, addiction, and mental diseases, said lead researcher  Bita Moghaddam, a professor of neuroscience in Pitt’s School of Arts and  Sciences. She and coauthor David Sturman, a Pitt neuroscience doctoral  student, observed the disparate reactions to reward in individual  neurons in the orbitofrontal cortex, a brain region that weighs payoff  and punishment to plan and make decisions.
“The disorganized and excess excitatory activity we saw in this part of  the brain means that reward and other stimuli are processed differently  by adolescents,” Moghaddam said. “This could intensify the effect of  reward on decision making and answer several questions regarding  adolescent behavior, from their greater susceptibility to substance  abuse to their more extreme reactions to pleasurable and upsetting  experiences.”
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