New Study Cracks the Code on Teen Decision-Making

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3 months ago

A groundbreaking study published in PLOS Biology reveals that reduced “decision noise” drives improvements in adolescent decision-making as they mature into adults.

Key Findings

  1. Decision noise decreases with age: Adolescents’ tendency to make suboptimal choices declines as they mature.
  2. Cognitive resource limitations: Limited brain development makes teens rely on simpler decision strategies, increasing susceptibility to external influences.
  3. Improved decision-making: Reduced decision noise correlates with enhanced planning skills, flexibility, and performance.

Study Design

Researchers analyzed data from 93 participants (12-42 years old) completing three reinforcement learning tasks:

  1. Motivational influences on choices
  2. Adaptive decision-making
  3. Goal-directed behavior

Expert Insights

“Teenagers make less optimal, ‘noisy’ decisions. As they grow older, these noisy decisions decrease, linked to improved complex decision-making skills.” – Study authors

Implications

  1. Neurodevelopmental disorders: Understanding decision noise may shed light on conditions like ADHD and autism.
  2. Cognitive training: Targeting decision-making skills could improve adolescent performance.
  3. Brain development: Further research on cognitive control and decision-making neural mechanisms.

Reference: Scholz et al. (2024). Decrease in decision noise from adolescence into adulthood. PLOS Biology.

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