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Comment
. 2012 May;48(3):624-7.
doi: 10.1037/a0027683.

Evolving science in adolescence: comment on Ellis et al. (2012)

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Comment

Evolving science in adolescence: comment on Ellis et al. (2012)

Kenneth A Dodge et al. Dev Psychol. 2012 May.

Abstract

Ellis et al. (2012) bring an evolutionary perspective to bear on adolescent risky behavioral development, clinical practice, and public policy. The authors offer important insights that (a) some risky behaviors may be adaptive for the individual and the species by being hard-wired due to fitness benefits and (b) interventions might be more successful if they move with, rather than against, the natural tendencies of an adolescent. Ellis and colleagues criticize the field of developmental psychopathology, but we see the 2 fields as complementary. Their position would be enhanced by integrating it with contemporary perspectives on dynamic cascades through which normative behavior turns into genuinely maladaptive outcomes, dual processes in adolescent neural development, and adolescent decision making. Finally, they rightly note that innovation is needed in interventions and policies toward adolescent problem behavior.

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References

    1. Albert D, Steinberg L. Adolescent judgment and decision making. Journal of Research on Adolescence. 2011;21:211–224.
    1. Dodge KA. Translational science in action: Hostile attributional style and the development of aggressive behavior problems. Development and Psychopathology. 2006;18:791–814. - PMC - PubMed
    1. Steinberg L. A social neuroscience perspective on adolescent risk-taking. Developmental Review. 2008;28(1):78–106. - PMC - PubMed

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