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For a teenager, social exclusion is often processed by the brain as physical pain.

: Nerve fibers are wrapped in a fatty substance called myelin, which speeds up the transmission of information between different brain regions. 4. Social Brain and Peer Influence

Report: The Cognitive and Neurological Landscape of the Teenage Brain For a teenager, social exclusion is often processed

The brain undergoes two major physical changes during this time:

The text provided appears to be a percent-encoded string that translates to the Russian phrase: (translated as: "What is he even thinking? The Teenage Brain, Time..." ). Social Brain and Peer Influence Report: The Cognitive

: Because the reward for a thrill is felt more intensely, teens are more likely to seek out high-risk activities to achieve a "dopamine hit." 3. Synaptic Pruning and Myelination

When someone asks, "What is he even thinking?", the answer is often that the brain is prioritizing and immediate reward while still building the structural "brakes" necessary for mature self-regulation. Synaptic Pruning and Myelination When someone asks, "What

: The ventral striatum (the brain's reward center) is more active in teens than in children or adults.