Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Why kids do not pay heed to their parents' criticism

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Nov, 2014 01:41 PM
    If your teenage son does not respond to your nagging, this could be because his brain cannot help but switch itself off when you begin lecturing him, a study suggests.
     
    While listening to parents' criticism, the brains of teenagers show more activity in areas involved in negative emotions and reduced activity in regions involved in emotional control and in taking other people's point of view, the results of the study found.
     
    The study involved 32 healthy participants, including 22 girls - the average age being 14.
     
    The adolescents lay in the brain imaging scanner as they listened to two 30-second clips of their own mothers criticising them, wired.com reported.
     
    "Youth shut down social processing (and) possibly do not think about their parents' mental states," the researchers were quoted as saying.
     
    The team, led by Kyung Hwa Lee from the University of Pittsburgh in the US, noted that the findings could lead to better parenting.
     
    "Parents may benefit from understanding that when they criticise their adolescents, adolescents may experience strong negative emotional reaction, may have difficulty cognitively controlling this emotion and may also find it challenging to understand the parent's perspective or mental state," they added.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Why students form close-knit groups in schools

    Why students form close-knit groups in schools
      It is a mixture of freedom and uncertainty that prompts students to cluster by race, gender, age, and social status in schools, a study shows....

    Why students form close-knit groups in schools

    Guess Who's Coming To Work? Mom & Dad Step Into The Cubicle On Bring In Your Parents Day

    Guess Who's Coming To Work? Mom & Dad Step Into The Cubicle On Bring In Your Parents Day
    Seta Whitford-Stark was dumbfounded last year when she found out her daughter Amy quit her job at an employee-recruiting agency to work for LinkedIn, an Internet company that Seta had never heard of. Amy tried to explain what the online professional networking service did, but Seta couldn't quite grasp the concept or why the 29-year-old would want to work there.

    Guess Who's Coming To Work? Mom & Dad Step Into The Cubicle On Bring In Your Parents Day

    Women have a much stronger sense of smell than men

    Women have a much stronger sense of smell than men
    Researchers have found biological evidence in the brains of men and women that may explain the olfactory difference between genders....

    Women have a much stronger sense of smell than men

    Gaming violence not linked to societal violence

    Gaming violence not linked to societal violence
    Contrary to popular beliefs, a study has uncovered that increasing consumption of violent video games and movies is not linked to rise in societal violence....

    Gaming violence not linked to societal violence

    Even A Newborn Can Post A Selfie

    Even A Newborn Can Post A Selfie
    Called The New Born Fame, the stuffed toy looks like a mobile dangling over a baby's crib but it lets the newborn post pictures and videos online.

    Even A Newborn Can Post A Selfie

    Elderly Enjoy New-age Foods

    Elderly Enjoy New-age Foods
    If you consider elderly people to be traditional consumers, think twice as a new study reveals that there are more elderly people who are happy to accept new-age foods.

    Elderly Enjoy New-age Foods