Learning deficits in adolescence linked to novel brain receptor

March 18, 2010

It is well known that the onset of puberty marks the end of the optimal period for learning language and certain spatial skills, such as computer/video game operation. Recent work published in the journal Science by Sheryl Smith, PhD, professor of physiology and pharmacology, and colleagues at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn shows that a novel brain receptor, alpha4-beta-delta, emerges at puberty in the hippocampus, part of the brain that controls learning and memory.

Before puberty, expression of this receptor is low and is optimal. However, at puberty, increases in this receptor reduce excitability and impair spatial learning. Dr. Smith has demonstrated that this learning deficit can be reversed by a stress steroid that diminishes the harmful effects of the alpha4-beta-delta receptors, thereby facilitating learning.

"These findings suggest that intrinsic brain mechanisms alter learning during adolescence, but that mild stress may be one factor that can reverse this decline in learning proficiency during the teenage years," says Dr. Smith. "They also suggest that different strategies for learning and motivation may be helpful in middle school. And it is within the realm of possibility that a drug could be developed that would increase learning ability post-puberty, one that might be especially useful for adolescents with learning disabilities."

In 2007, Dr. Smith and colleagues demonstrated that a hormone normally released in response to stress, THP, actually reverses its effect at puberty, when it increases activity of the hippocampus. While in adults this hormone acts like at tranquilizer, in adolescents it has the opposite effect, an action that may help to explain in teenagers.

The new report on learning deficits published in Science by Dr. Smith and colleagues is titled, "A Critical Role for Alpha4-Beta-Delta GABA-A Receptors in Shaping Learning Deficits at Puberty in Mice."

Provided by SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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frajo
Mar 18, 2010

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It is well known that the onset of puberty marks the end of the optimal period for learning language
This has to be a statistical result only as one of my friends has a better command of a language which he started to learn when 40 than of any of the three languages he had learnt at school.
xponen
Mar 19, 2010

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Some language are easier for adult to understand, while some language is easier for infant to understand. This is because... certain language has a difference in grammatical structure that require adult comprehension (eg; english), while certain language has structure that's easier to infants. -For example; As said in Physorg's other article: "A remaining puzzle is why languages with few speakers are so complex in the first place. One possibility, explored by researchers, is that features such as grammatical gender and complex conjugational systems, while difficult for adult learners to master, may facilitate language learning in children by providing a network of redundant information that can cue children in on the meanings of words and how to string them together."

http://www.physor...456.html

Therefore... language acquisition is not a clear performance-indicator of someone's ability to learn.
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