4.8 • 4.1K Ratings
🗓️ 17 February 2022
⏱️ ? minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
‘Why are teens prone to risky behaviour?’ asks Dr Mark Gallaway, ‘especially when with their friends?’
13 year old Emma wonders why she’s chatty at school but antisocial when she gets home.
And exasperated mum Michelle wants to know why her teens struggle to get out of bed in the morning.
Swirling hormones and growing bodies have a lot to answer for but, as Professor of Psychology from the University of Cambridge Sarah-Jayne Blakemore explains, there’s also a profound transformation going on in the brain.
Dr Adam Rutherford and Dr Hannah Fry discover how the adolescent brain is maturing and rewiring at the cellular level and why evolution might have primed teens to prefer their peers over their parents.
Frances Jensen, Professor of Neurology at the University of Pennsylvania, tells us how all these brain changes can impact social relationships.
And Dr Rachel Sharman, a sleep researcher from the University of Oxford, reports the surprising findings from her sleep study tracking 100 teenagers around the UK.
Producer: Ilan Goodman
First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in February 2022.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts. |
0:05.5 | Welcome back to a brand new series of the QS cases of Brotherford and Fry. |
0:09.9 | 19. |
0:10.9 | So we always go on about how we've forgotten what series it is, but we've counted. |
0:13.5 | It's 19. |
0:14.5 | What point do we stop counting? |
0:16.8 | 19. |
0:17.8 | 18. |
0:18.8 | 18. |
0:19.8 | Here we go then. |
0:22.5 | Another episode for your ears. |
0:30.3 | Today we are talking about people accused of being lazy, rude and surly. |
0:35.8 | People who make poor decisions based on confused logic and rampant self-interest. |
0:40.3 | Now are you talking about British politics again, Hannah? |
0:43.5 | Not this time, no. |
0:44.5 | Today we are talking about teenagers. |
0:47.1 | And okay, those are the stereotypes about teens that are absolute worst, but Adam, you've |
0:51.6 | got teenage kids and you were the lovely. |
0:53.5 | Yeah, I agree. |
0:54.5 | Thank you very much. |
0:55.5 | I mean, I think they're all lovely and I think their friends are too. |
0:58.1 | I coach a rugby team on Sunday mornings, so I spend a couple of hours with 40, 14-year-old |
... |
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