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Adolescence as a Sensitive Period of Social Brain Development
Tea from 10:45am
Please check our website at www.oxfordmindfulness.org for details of how to find us
Abstract
The brain has evolved to understand and interact with other people. This talk focuses on how the social brain, that is the network of brain regions involved in understanding others, develops during adolescence. Adolescence is a time characterised by change – hormonally, physically, psychologically and socially. Social cognitive processes involved in navigating an increasingly complex social world continue to develop throughout human adolescence. Areas of the social brain undergo significant reorganisation in terms of structure and function during the second decade of life, which possibly reflects a sensitive period for adapting to the social environment.
About Professor Sarah-Jayne Blakemore
Sarah-Jayne Blakemore is a Royal Society University Research Fellow and Professor in Cognitive Neuroscience at UCL. She is Leader of the Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Group and deputy director of the UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience. Her group’s research focuses on brain development in human adolescence.
All are welcome to attend.
Oxford Mindfulness Centre
@OMC_mindfulness
www.oxfordmindfulness.org
Date:
21 September 2015, 11:00
Venue:
seminar room
Speaker:
Professor Sarah-Jayne Blakemore (University College London)
Part of:
Medical Sciences Division Events
Booking required?:
Not required
Booking url:
http://www.oxfordmindfulness.org/
Audience:
Public
Editor:
Alison Brindle