Steinberg 2007
Steinberg 2007
Steinberg 2007
ABSTRACTTrying
Volume 16Number 2
Systematic research does not support the stereotype of adolescents as irrational individuals who believe they are invulnerable
and who are unaware, inattentive to, or unconcerned about the
potential harms of risky behavior. In fact, the logical-reasoning
abilities of 15-year-olds are comparable to those of adults,
adolescents are no worse than adults at perceiving risk or
estimating their vulnerability to it (Reyna & Farley, 2006), and
increasing the salience of the risks associated with making a
potentially dangerous decision has comparable effects on adolescents and adults (Millstein & Halpern-Felsher, 2002). Most
studies nd few age differences in individuals evaluations of the
risks inherent in a wide range of dangerous behaviors, in judgments about the seriousness of the consequences that might
result from risky behavior, or in the ways that the relative costs
and benets of risky activities are evaluated (Beyth-Marom,
Austin, Fischoff, Palmgren, & Jacobs-Quadrel, 1993).
Because adolescents and adults reason about risk in similar
ways, many researchers have posited that age differences in
actual risk taking are due to differences in the information that
adolescents and adults use when making decisions. Attempts to
reduce adolescent risk taking through interventions designed to
alter knowledge, attitudes, or beliefs have proven remarkably
disappointing, however (Steinberg, 2004). Efforts to provide
adolescents with information about the risks of substance use,
reckless driving, and unprotected sex typically result in improvements in young peoples thinking about these phenomena
but seldom change their actual behavior. Generally speaking,
reductions in adolescents health-compromising behavior are
more strongly linked to changes in the contexts in which those
risks are taken (e.g., increases in the price of cigarettes, enforcement of graduated licensing programs, more vigorously
implemented policies to interdict drugs, or condom distribution
programs) than to changes in what adolescents know or believe.
The failure to account for age differences in risk taking
through studies of reasoning and knowledge stymied researchers
for some time. Health educators, however, have been undaunted,
and they have continued to design and offer interventions qof
unproven effectiveness, such as Drug Abuse Resistance
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In recent years, owing to advances in the developmental neuroscience of adolescence and the recognition that the conventional
decision-making framework may not be the best way to think
about adolescent risk taking, a new perspective on the subject
has emerged (Steinberg, 2004). This new view begins from
the premise that risk taking in the real world is the product of
both logical reasoning and psychosocial factors. However, unlike logical-reasoning abilities, which appear to be more or less
fully developed by age 15, psychosocial capacities that improve
decision making and moderate risk takingsuch as impulse
control, emotion regulation, delay of gratication, and resistance
to peer inuencecontinue to mature well into young adulthood
(Steinberg, 2004; see Fig. 1). Accordingly, psychosocial immaturity in these respects during adolescence may undermine
what otherwise might be competent decision making. The
conclusion drawn by many researchers, that adolescents are as
competent decision makers as adults are, may hold true only
under conditions where the inuence of psychosocial factors is
minimized.
Logical Reasoning
Psychosocial
Maturity
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
Age
Fig. 1. Hypothetical graph of development of logical reasoning abilities
versus psychosocial maturation. Although logical reasoning abilities reach
adult levels by age 16, psychosocial capacities, such as impulse control,
future orientation, or resistance to peer inuence, continue to develop into
young adulthood.
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Volume 16Number 2
Laurence Steinberg
Volume 16Number 2
3.4
Adolescents
2.9
2.4
Crashes
Young Adults
Adults
1.9
1.4
0.9
0.4
Alone
With Friends
Fig. 2. Risk taking of adolescents, young adults, and adults during a video
driving game, when playing alone and when playing with friends. Adapted
from Gardner & Steinberg (2004).
than adults in decision-making tasks, there is reason to speculate that, when presented with risky situations that have both
potential rewards and potential costs, adolescents may be more
sensitive than adults to variation in rewards but comparably
sensitive (or perhaps even less sensitive) to variation in costs
(Ernst et al., 2005).
It thus appears that the brain system that regulates the processing of rewards, social information, and emotions is becoming
more sensitive and more easily aroused around the time of
puberty. What about its sibling, the cognitive-control system?
Regions making up the cognitive-control network, especially
prefrontal regions, continue to exhibit gradual changes in
structure and function during adolescence and early adulthood
(Casey, Tottenham, Liston, & Durston, 2005). Much publicity
has been given to the nding that synaptic pruning (the selective
elimination of seldom-used synapses) and myelination (the development of the fatty sheaths that insulate neuronal circuitry)both of which increase the efciency of information
processingcontinue to occur in the prefrontal cortex well into
the early 20s. But frontal regions also become more integrated
with other brain regions during adolescence and early adulthood, leading to gradual improvements in many aspects of
cognitive control such as response inhibition; this integration
may be an even more important change than changes within the
frontal region itself. Imaging studies using tasks in which individuals are asked to inhibit a prepotent responselike trying to
look away from, rather than toward, a point of lighthave shown
that adolescents tend to recruit the cognitive-control network
less broadly than do adults, perhaps overtaxing the capacity of
the more limited number of regions they activate (Luna et al.,
2001).
In essence, one of the reasons the cognitive-control system of
adults is more effective than that of adolescents is that adults
brains distribute its regulatory responsibilities across a wider
network of linked components. This lack of cross-talk across
brain regions in adolescence results not only in individuals
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What does this mean for the prevention of unhealthy risk taking
in adolescence? Given extant research suggesting that it is not
the way adolescents think or what they dont know or understand
that is the problem, a more profitable strategy than attempting to
change how adolescents view risky activities might be to focus
on limiting opportunities for immature judgment to have harmful
consequences. More than 90% of all American high-school
students have had sex, drug, and driver education in their
schools, yet large proportions of them still have unsafe sex, binge
drink, smoke cigarettes, and drive recklessly (often more than
one of these at the same time; Steinberg, 2004). Strategies such
as raising the price of cigarettes, more vigilantly enforcing laws
governing the sale of alcohol, expanding adolescents access to
mental-health and contraceptive services, and raising the
driving age would likely be more effective in limiting adolescent
smoking, substance abuse, pregnancy, and automobile fatalities
than strategies aimed at making adolescents wiser, less impulsive, or less shortsighted. Some things just take time to develop,
and, like it or not, mature judgment is probably one of them.
The research reviewed here suggests that heightened risk
taking during adolescence is likely to be normative, biologically
driven, and, to some extent, inevitable. There is probably very
little that can or ought to be done to either attenuate or delay the
shift in reward sensitivity that takes place at puberty. It may be
58
possible to accelerate the maturation of self-regulatory competence, but no research has examined whether this is possible. In
light of studies showing familial inuences on psychosocial
maturity in adolescence, understanding how contextual factors
inuence the development of self-regulation and knowing the
neural underpinnings of these processes should be a high priority for those interested in the well-being of young people.
Recommended Reading
Casey, B.J., Tottenham, N., Liston, C., & Durston, S. (2005). (See References)
Johnson, R., & Gerstein, D. (1998). (See References)
Nelson, E., Leibenluft, E., McClure, E., & Pine, D. (2005). (See References)
Spear, P. (2000). (See References)
Steinberg, L. (2004). (See References)
REFERENCES
Baird, A., Fugelsang, J., & Bennett, C. (2005, April). What were you
thinking?: An fMRI study of adolescent decision making. Poster
presented at the annual meeting of the Cognitive Neuroscience
Society, New York.
Beyth-Marom, R., Austin, L., Fischoff, B., Palmgren, C., & JacobsQuadrel, M. (1993). Perceived consequences of risky behaviors:
Adults and adolescents. Developmental Psychology, 29, 549563.
Casey, B.J., Tottenham, N., Liston, C., & Durston, S. (2005). Imaging the
developing brain: What have we learned about cognitive development? Trends in Cognitive Science, 9, 104110.
Chambers, R.A., Taylor, J.R., & Potenza, M.N. (2003). Developmental
neurocircuitry of motivation in adolescence: A critical period of
addiction vulnerability. American Journal of Psychiatry, 160,
10411052.
Collins, W.A., & Steinberg, L. (2006). Adolescent development in interpersonal context. In W. Damon & R. Lerner (Series Eds.) &
N. Eisenberg (Vol. Ed.), Handbook of Child Psychology: Social,
emotional, and personality development (Vol. 3, pp. 10031067).
New York: Wiley.
Drevets, W.C., & Raichle, M.E. (1998). Reciprocal suppression of regional cerebral blood ow during emotional versus higher cognitive processes: Implications for interactions between emotion and
cognition. Cognition and Emotion, 12, 353385.
Ernst, M., Jazbec, S., McClure, E.B., Monk, C.S., Blair, R.J.R.,
Leibenluft, E., & Pine, D.S. (2005). Amygdala and nucleus accumbens activation in response to receipt and omission of gains in
adults and adolescents. Neuroimage, 25, 12791291.
Galvan, A., Hare, T., Davidson, M., Spicer, J., Glover, G., & Casey, B.J.
(2005). The role of ventral frontostriatal circuitry in reward-based
learning in humans. Journal of Neuroscience, 25, 86508656.
Gardner, M., & Steinberg, L. (2005). Peer inuence on risk-taking, risk
preference, and risky decision-making in adolescence and
Volume 16Number 2
Laurence Steinberg
Volume 16Number 2
Nelson, E., Leibenluft, E., McClure, E., & Pine, D. (2005). The social
re-orientation of adolescence: A neuroscience perspective on the
process and its relation to psychopathology. Psychological Medicine, 35, 163174.
Reyna, V., & Farley, F. (2006). Risk and rationality in adolescent
decision-making: Implications for theory, practice, and public
policy. Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 7, 144.
Spear, P. (2000). The adolescent brain and age-related behavioral
manifestations. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 24, 417
463.
Steinberg, L. (2004). Risk-taking in adolescence: What changes,
and why? Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1021,
5158.
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