Invitation to the Life Span by Kathleen Stassen Berger
Download
Report
Transcript Invitation to the Life Span by Kathleen Stassen Berger
The Developing Person
Through the Life Span 8e
by Kathleen Stassen Berger
Chapter 17– Emerging Adulthood:
Biosocial Development
PowerPoint Slides developed by
Martin Wolfger and Michael James
Ivy Tech Community College-Bloomington
Reviewed by Raquel Henry
Lone Star College, Kingwood
Emerging Adulthood
The period between the ages of 18 and 25, which is now
widely thought of as a separate developmental stage.
Growth and Strength
Strong and Active Bodies
• Emerging adults are usually in good health.
• Traditionally, ages 18 and 25 were a time for
hard physical work and childbearing.
• Physical work and parenthood are no longer
expected of every young adult in the 21st
century.
Growth and Strength
• Because of food availability, most emerging
adults have reached full height (girls usually by
age 16, boys by age 18).
• Muscle growth and fat accumulation continue into
the early 20s, when women attain adult breast
and hip size and men reach full shoulder width
and upper-arm strength.
• Death from disease almost never occurs during
emerging adulthood.
Bodies Designed for Health
• By age 20, the immune system is well-developed
• Usually, blood pressure is normal, teeth develop
no new cavities, heart rate is steady, the brain is
fully grown, and lung capacity is as large as it will
ever be.
• Senescence
– The process of aging, whereby the body becomes
less strong and efficient.
– Begins in late adolescence
Growth and Strength
Bodies in Balance
Homeostasis
• The adjustment of all the body’s systems to
keep physiological functions in a state of
equilibrium.
• As the body ages, it takes longer for these
adjustments to occur, so it becomes harder
for older bodies to adapt to stress.
• Nutrition and exercise underlie health at every
age.
Unused Potential
• Organ reserve
– The capacity of organs to allow the body to
cope with stress, via extra, unused functioning
ability.
• Maximum strength potential
– Begins to decline by age 25
– Fifty-year-olds retain 90% of muscle reserve
they had at age 20
Sexual Activity
• The sexual-reproductive system is especially
vigorous during emerging adulthood.
• The sex drive is powerful, infertility is rare,
orgasm is frequent, and birth is easy, with
fewer complications in the early 20s than at
any other time.
• Sexual-reproductive characteristics are
produced by sex hormones, which peak in
both sexes at about age 20.
Growth and Strength
• With frequent intercourse and without
contraception, the average woman in her early
20s becomes pregnant within three months.
• Globalization, advanced technology, and modern
medicine have combined to produce effective
contraception, available in almost every nation.
• As fewer infants die, people no longer need to
begin childbearing before age 20 or have four or
more children simply to ensure that some children
will survive.
Growth and Strength
• Advances in contraception have reduced the
birth rate and have also increased the rate of
sexual activity, especially among unmarried
adults.
• Globally, emerging adults have fewer babies
but engage in more sexual activity than older
adults (married or not) or than people their
own age once did.
• Half of all emerging adults in the United
States have had at least one sexually
transmitted infection (STI).
Emotional Stress
• One consequence of current sexual patterns may be
emotional stress as relationships begin and end.
• Attitudes about the purpose of sex (Laumann &
Michael):
– Reproduction
– Relationship
– Recreation
• If partners have differing ideas about the purpose of
sex or the nature of gender, emotional pain and
frustration can occur.
Sexually Transmitted Infections
(STIs)
• STIs have always been present but the rate has
reached epidemic proportions due to sexual
patterns.
• Best way to prevent STIs is lifelong monogamy.
• Worldwide, globalization fuels every contagious
disease.
Psychopathology
• Incidence of psychopathology increases in
emerging adulthood.
• Rate of serious mental illness is almost double
that for adults over age 25.
• Diathesis-stress model
– View that mental disorders are produced by the
interaction of genetics (diathesis) and a stressful
environment and life events.
Mood Disorders
Bipolar Disorder
• May begin in childhood but becomes more
severe in adulthood.
Depression
• Most common mood disorder
• A loss of interest or pleasure for 2 weeks or
more.
• May be rooted in imbalances in neurotransmitters
and hormones
Anxiety Disorders
•
•
•
•
Evident in ¼ of all U.S. residents below 25
Panic attacks, PTSD, and OCD
More common, worldwide than depression
Age and genetics shape the symptoms
• Hikikomori
– Common among young adults in Japan
– Victims isolate themselves for months or years
Schizophrenia
• About 1% of adults have schizophrenia
• Disorganized and bizarre thoughts,
delusions, hallucinations, and emotions
• Risk factors: genetic, malnutrition when
brain is developing, social pressure.
• Symptoms usually begin in adolescence
Exercise
• Reduces blood pressure, strengthens the heart
& lungs.
• Makes depression, osteoporosis, heart disease,
arthritis and some cancers less likely.
• Those who are not fit during emerging adulthood
are 4 times more likely to have diabetes and
high blood pressure 15 years later.
Eating Well
• At every stage of life, diet affects future
development
• Set point
– A certain body weight that a person’s homeostatic
processes strive to maintain.
• Body mass index (BMI)
– The ratio of a person’s weight in kilograms divided by
their height in meters squared.
Eating Well
Taking Risks
• Emerging adulthood is marked by a greater
willingness to take risks of all sorts, not just
sexual ones.
• Young adults enjoy
danger, drive without
seat belts, carry guns,
try addictive drugs.
Taking Risks
• Edgework
–Occupations, recreational activities, or
other ventures that involve a degree of risk
or danger.
–The prospect of “living on the edge” makes
edgework compelling to some individuals.
• Extreme sports
–Forms of recreation that include apparent
risk of injury or death and that are attractive
and thrilling as a result.
Drug Abuse
• Drug abuse
– The ingestion of a drug to the extent that it
impairs the user’s biological or psychological
well-being.
• Drug addiction
– A condition of drug dependence in which the
absence of the given drug from the
individual’s system produces a drive—
physiological, biological, or both—to ingest
more of the drug.
Drug Abuse
Drug Abuse
• Drug abuse is particularly common among
those who die violently.
• In the U.S., between the ages of 15 and 25,
almost 1 male in every 100 dies violently,
through suicide, homicide, or a motor-vehicle
accident.
• About 4 times as many young men as young
women commit suicide or die in motor-vehicle
accidents, and 6 times as many are
murdered.
A Way to Curb Alcohol Abuse in
College
Social norms approach
• A method of reducing risky behavior among
emerging adults that is based on their desire
to follow social norms.
• This approach publicizes survey results to
make emerging adults aware of the actual
prevalence of various behaviors within their
peer group.