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Kiel, L. Douglas – Complicity: An International Journal of Complexity and Education, 2014
Socio-techno-cultural reality, in the current historical era, evolves at a faster rate than do human brain or human institutions. This reality creates a "complexity gap" that reduces human and institutional capacities to adapt to the challenges of late modernity. New insights from the neurosciences may help to reduce the complexity gap.…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Evolution, Biology, Psychology
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Kelly, Peter – Journal of Youth Studies, 2012
This article suggests that ideas about adolescent brains and their development increasingly function as powerful truths in making sense of young people. In this context, the knowledge practices of the neurosciences and evolutionary and developmental psychology are deemed capable of producing what we have come to understand as the evidence on which…
Descriptors: Evidence, Brain, Developmental Psychology, Adolescent Development
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Hawley, Patricia H. – Journal of Research on Adolescence, 2011
Adolescence is a period characterized by well-documented growth and change, including reproductive, social, and cognitive development. Though not unheard of, modern evolutionary approaches to adolescence are still relatively uncommon. Recent treatises in developmental biology, however, have yielded new tools through which to explore human…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Adolescents, Adolescent Development, Evolution
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Owings, Donald H. – European Journal of Developmental Science, 2007
Gilbert Gottlieb's data and epigenetic approach support the conclusion that organisms are functionally-whole agents at each phase of development rather than simply incompletely developed adults prior to sexual maturity and deteriorated adults in old age. This implies that organisms construct distinct ontogenetic niches at each phase of…
Descriptors: Evolution, Developmental Stages, Adolescent Development, Age Differences