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The Infinite Monkey Cage

Teenage Brain

The Infinite Monkey Cage

BBC

Comedy, Science

4.79.4K Ratings

🗓️ 29 January 2018

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Teenage Brain

Brian Cox and Robin Ince are joined by impressionist Rory Bremner, Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at UCL Sarah-Jayne Blakemore and Professor of Zoology at Manchester University Matthew Cobb to look at the working of the teenage brain, and why teenagers are so, well, teenagery. Stomping off to your bedroom, being embarrassed by your parents, wanting to fit in with your peers and a love of risky behaviour are all well known traits associated with our teenage years, exasperating parents through the ages. But new research into dynamic changes going on in the brain during these key years has revealed that it's not just hormones that are responsible for these behaviours. Could a better understanding of what is going on during these formative years not only help teenagers themselves, but inform our education system and even help prevent many of the mental health problems that often begin during adolescence?

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is the BBC.

0:03.6

Hello, I'm Robin Inz.

0:04.8

And I'm Brian Cox.

0:05.7

Today, we ask, was Brian's pop career just a phase

0:09.0

he was going through due to the changing structures

0:11.2

of his teenage brain before he entered the adulthood

0:13.7

of being a particle physicist?

0:15.7

And why did Robin remain trapped

0:17.3

in the perpetual adolescence of being

0:19.1

stand-up comedian?

0:20.2

Sharp, Brian. I thought, I'm not a judge.

0:21.9

You're such an idiot.

0:22.9

Anyway, so, anyway, I am now a serious radio

0:26.9

for broadcasters, somewhere between Melvin Bragg

0:29.3

and Nicholas Parsons, which is how I got the job.

0:32.2

So...

0:33.2

LAUGHTER

0:35.2

Today, we discuss the science of teenagers.

0:38.8

What physiological changes occur in the brain during the teenage years?

0:42.4

Is there an evolutionary explanation for them?

0:44.8

Do these changes occur in other animals?

0:47.0

And why didn't these changes reach completion in Robinance?

...

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