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Catalyst – Teen Brain (2005)

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A typical teenager education content clip 1, 2

Original classification rating: PG. This clip chosen to be PG

Clip description

Cuinn is a typical teenager. He’s 16 years old and full of curiosity. He’s creative, thrillseeking and learning to break away from his parents’ world. But according to the latest science, his brain is still very unformed and won’t be mature until he reaches the age of 25 years.

Curator’s notes

One of the delights of this magazine item is the filmmaker’s skill in using Cuinn’s passion for clay animation to enhance the brain imagery and to unite the disparate parts of a compelling story. Combined with the stylish camerawork and the fast pacing of the story, as well as the neat idea of pitching father against adolescent son, it makes for a fascinating and watchable episode.

Catalyst is usually presented in a magazine format with two or three items for each television half-hour. This program is a fine example of just how much can be packed into an item of around 15 minutes – in this case, some hard science and a couple of really interesting human stories that graphically explain what happens when science and the law are at odds. And binding it all together are the powerful visual effects of a young man’s animation of the brain.

Teacher’s notes

provided by The Le@rning FederationEducation Services Australia

This clip shows the significant differences between Andrew and his 16-year-old son Cuinn in their ability to control impulses, and describes how brain maturation research can explain them. The early scenes show the two taking a counter-intuitive impulsiveness test as their brains are scanned by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The following scenes reveal Cuinn used twice as much brain area as his father to do much worse in the test. Using animations and comparing the MRI scans, researchers explain that the region controlling impulses is the last to mature.

Educational value points

  • The process of 'sculpting’ or brain remodelling described in the clip involves little-used synapses being pruned away and those in use being strengthened and stabilised by white matter (myelin) wrapping itself around them. Research has shown that adolescence and early adulthood is a major period of brain development, as important as the early childhood years, with the sculpting processes usually beginning at about 12 years of age and ending at about 25.
  • The sculpting process in the frontal lobe area of the brain begins at the back and moves forward, with a region known to be instrumental in controlling impulses among the last to mature. This region, called the dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex, does not reach its adult sculpted size until the mid-20s. The MRI scans show the cortex in Andrew’s brain is sculpted and so he easily controls impulses in the test. The cortex is not mature in Cuinn’s brain and so he fails.
  • Brain research helps explain why adolescence and early adulthood can be times of over-confidence and high risk. Just before puberty a marked over-production of synapses, with a substantial increase in grey matter, takes place in the frontal lobe area. This burst of synapses, still in mid-adolescence relatively unsculpted and unrestrained by the brain’s 'braking system’, explains Cuinn’s creativity, belief that he is smarter than his father and failure in the test.
  • As seen here, MRI and similar tools have transformed the field of neuroscientific research, allowing groundbreaking studies to be done on brain structure and function during adolescence. MRI uses radio waves generated in a strong magnetic field to detect small molecular changes in soft tissue such as the brain. Cross-sectional images and images in other planes are generated by computer from this information.
  • Although the complexities of development in the brain’s four lobes are much simplified in this episode from the television science documentary series Catalyst, the clip shows the program’s ability to make exciting science accessible to the public. The father-and-son test provides a concrete visual example to act as an anchor for the explanation, while Cuinn’s modelling of his clay animation figure acts as a visual metaphor for the sculpting processes in his brain.
  • Australian scientists are engaged in this field of research, with the Melbourne Neuropsychiatry Centre at the University of Melbourne where this footage was shot, building an international reputation for neuro-imaging and neuropsychological work on schizophrenia and psychosis. Professor Christos Pantelis is foundation professor of neuropsychiatry and scientific director and Dr Stephen Wood is a senior fellow with an interest in brain development during adolescence.

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This clip is available for download for the limited purpose of criticism and review in an educational context. You must obtain permission from editorial@aso.gov.au for all other purposes for use of this material.

Terms & Conditions

australianscreen is produced by the National Film and Sound Archive. By using the website you agree to comply with the terms and conditions described here and elsewhere on this site. The NFSA may amend the 'Conditions of Use’ from time to time without notice.

All materials on the site, including but not limited to text, video clips, audio clips, designs, logos, illustrations and still images, are protected by the Copyright Laws of Australia and international conventions. ALL rights are reserved.

You must read and agree to the following terms and conditions before downloading this clip:

When you access ABC materials on australianscreen you agree that:

  1. You may download this clip to assist your information, criticism and review purposes in conjunction with viewing this website only;
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