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: Teenagers often process information using the amygdala (the emotional center) rather than the PFC, leading to decisions driven by "gut feelings" or immediate emotions rather than long-term logic. 2. The Reward System and Dopamine
When someone asks, "What is he even thinking?", the answer is often that the brain is prioritizing and immediate reward while still building the structural "brakes" necessary for mature self-regulation. : Teenagers often process information using the amygdala
Based on this string, the report refers to the popular scientific discourse regarding the neurological development of adolescents. Below is a report summarizing the key neurological and psychological factors often discussed under this theme. Based on this string, the report refers to
: The ventral striatum (the brain's reward center) is more active in teens than in children or adults. The is the brain's "CEO," responsible for executive
The is the brain's "CEO," responsible for executive functions like planning, impulse control, and weighing consequences.
: Nerve fibers are wrapped in a fatty substance called myelin, which speeds up the transmission of information between different brain regions. 4. Social Brain and Peer Influence





