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Stress response and the adolescent transition: Performance versus peer rejection stressors

TLDR
Heightened physiological stress responses in typical adolescents may facilitate adaptation to new challenges of adolescence and adulthood and in high-risk adolescents, this normative shift may tip the balance toward stress response dysregulation associated with depression and other psychopathology.
Abstract
Little is known about normative variation in stress response over the adolescent transition. This study examined neuroendocrine and cardiovascular responses to performance and peer rejection stressors over the adolescent transition in a normative sample. Participants were 82 healthy children (ages 7-12 years, n = 39, 22 females) and adolescents (ages 13-17, n = 43, 20 females) recruited through community postings. Following a habituation session, participants completed a performance (public speaking, mental arithmetic, mirror tracing) or peer rejection (exclusion challenges) stress session. Salivary cortisol, salivary alpha amylase (sAA), systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP), and heart rate were measured throughout. Adolescents showed significantly greater cortisol, sAA, SBP, and DBP stress response relative to children. Developmental differences were most pronounced in the performance stress session for cortisol and DBP and in the peer rejection session for sAA and SBP. Heightened physiological stress responses in typical adolescents may facilitate adaptation to new challenges of adolescence and adulthood. In high-risk adolescents, this normative shift may tip the balance toward stress response dysregulation associated with depression and other psychopathology. Specificity of physiological response by stressor type highlights the importance of a multisystem approach to the psychobiology of stress and may also have implications for understanding trajectories to psychopathology.

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Salivary alpha-amylase as a non-invasive biomarker for the sympathetic nervous system: current state of research.

TL;DR: This review describes sAA as an emerging biomarker for stress and provides an overview of the current literature on stress-related alterations in sAA, and critically discusses how sAA might reflect changes in the autonomic nervous system.
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Developmental changes in hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal activity over the transition to adolescence: normative changes and associations with puberty.

TL;DR: Findings show that puberty-associated increases in hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis activity heightens the risk of psychopathology, and higher sympathetic tone was associated with more fearful temperament, whereas greater cortisol reactivity wasassociated with more anxious and depressed symptoms for girls.
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The Teenage Brain: Sensitivity to Social Evaluation

TL;DR: For instance, this paper found that while processing information relevant to social evaluation and the internal states of other people, adolescents respond with heightened emotional intensity and corresponding nonlinear recruitment of socioaffective brain circuitry.
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Determinants of salivary α-amylase in humans and methodological considerations

TL;DR: Basic and recent findings on methodological issues and potential factors influencing sAA measurement are summarized to derive a set of recommendations enabling researchers to successfully using sAA in psychoneuroendocrinological experiments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Importance of investing in adolescence from a developmental science perspective

TL;DR: The case for investing in adolescence as a period of rapid growth, learning, adaptation, and formational neurobiological development is summarized.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Protective and Damaging Effects of Stress Mediators

TL;DR: The long-term effect of the physiologic response to stress is reviewed, which I refer to as allostatic load, which is the ability to achieve stability through change.
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The ‘Trier Social Stress Test’ – A Tool for Investigating Psychobiological Stress Responses in a Laboratory Setting

TL;DR: The results suggest that gender, genetics and nicotine consumption can influence the individual's stress responsiveness to psychological stress while personality traits showed no correlation with cortisol responses to TSST stimulation.
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Variations in pattern of pubertal changes in girls.

TL;DR: The extent of normal individual variation observed in the events of puberty among the girls of the Harpenden Growth Study is described.
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Acute stressors and cortisol responses: a theoretical integration and synthesis of laboratory research.

TL;DR: Motivated performance tasks elicited cortisol responses if they were uncontrollable or characterized by social-evaluative threat (task performance could be negatively judged by others), when methodological factors and other stressor characteristics were controlled for.
Journal ArticleDOI

The adolescent brain and age-related behavioral manifestations

TL;DR: Developmental changes in prefrontal cortex and limbic brain regions of adolescents across a variety of species, alterations that include an apparent shift in the balance between mesocortical and mesolimbic dopamine systems likely contribute to the unique characteristics of adolescence.
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