Dr. Jennifer Pfeifer
@jennDSN
dev soc neuro professor @uoregon • studying the changing bodies, brains, & social worlds of adolescents • National Scientific Council on Adolescence • she/her
ID:3452694926
http://uodsnlab.com 04-09-2015 22:30:47
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📢 Flux Society will host a virtual roundtable: 'Designing Investigator Initiated Studies in the Era of Big Data' on March 6th. 📢
Join a discussion among experts in developmental cognitive neuroscience.
Send me (moderator) questions before the event!
fluxsociety.org/2024-business-…
The GUTS - Growing Up Together in Society conference closes with an inspiring message from Ron Dahl about the importance of mattering for adolescents, of the relational environment, of social learning (which increasingly happens in the digital world). And feelings!!
The presentation on adolescent digital technology use continues with Dr. Eva Telzer telling us important findings about sleep, objective usage (pickups and time spent), and seeking rewards after use of social media GUTS - Growing Up Together in Society
Balanced perspective on adolescents and social media from Mitch Prinstein #GUTS2023 There are positive attributes to social media. How do teens actually use it, and who is susceptible (particularly to exposure to cyber hate)? GUTS - Growing Up Together in Society
Fascinating talk on emergence of social networks in first year college students over time by Christoph Stadtfeld #GUTS2023 Including changes in interaction and collaboration after the pandemic GUTS - Growing Up Together in Society
Ingmar Franken shared about using the ERN and theta activity to look at externalizing problems and substance use. Incredible big dataset underway (3000 people and counting)! In GUTS - Growing Up Together in Society they will look at social factors and reward sensitivity in relation to self-regulation.
Day 2 of GUTS - Growing Up Together in Society and Berna Guroglu starts us off with a review of developmental social neuroscience insights on peer relations in adolescence, such as youth with stable best friendships have different longitudinal patterns of vicarious reward processing.