According to neuroscience researchers, hard definitions of adulthood seem "increasingly absurd" before adults reach the age of 30.
While the UK's legal system currently recognizes an 18-year-old as an adult adult, scientists say that people have undergone significant changes in their brains for many years.
Recent research suggests that these changes can have significant effects on youth behavior and make them more vulnerable to mental health disorders.
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Scientists say this new knowledge has major implications for society.
They spoke before a meeting of the Academy of Medical Sciences in Oxford, which focuses specifically on brain development.
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1/21 Animal with transient anus discovered
A scientist fell on a creature with a "transient anus" that only appears when necessary, before disappearing completely. Dr. Sidney Tamm, of the Marine Biology Laboratory, initially found no evidence of anus on this species. However, when the animal is full, a pore opens to evacuate the waste
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8/21 Nobel Prize for Laser Physicists
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11/21 New human organ discovered that scientists previously lacked
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16/21 Baby Hawaiian Squid
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17/21 Skeletons of 5,000-year-old Chinese "giants" discovered by archaeologists
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Youtube
18/21 NASA discovers a hole in the sun 75,000 km wide
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19/21 View (active tab) Apple News New Workflow Modification Mailbox for Clear Cache NewsScience Revisions A 132 Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Fossil Discovered at a Surrey Plant
Paleontologists Sarah Moore and Jamie Jordan believe they have discovered an Iguanodon dinosaur, an herbivore about 3 meters tall and 10 meters long.
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20/21 The discovery of life on Mars is less likely, researchers discovering toxic chemicals on its surface
Echus Chasma, one of the largest source areas of water on Mars
Getty Images
21/21 An iris clip attached to the eye
This image is part of the Wellcome Images Awards and shows how an artificial intraocular lens is adjusted to the eye. Used for conditions such as myopia and cataracts.
University of Cambridge Hospitals NHS FT. Welcome pictures
1/21 Animal with transient anus discovered
A scientist fell on a creature with a "transient anus" that only appears when necessary, before disappearing completely. Dr. Sidney Tamm, of the Marine Biology Laboratory, initially found no evidence of anus on this species. However, when the animal is full, a pore opens to evacuate the waste
Steven G Johnson
2/21 Giant bee spotted
Feared to disappear, Wallace's bee Giant was spotted for the first time in nearly 40 years. An international team of environmental advocates spotted the bee, four times larger than a typical honey bee, during an expedition to a group of Indonesian islands.
Clay bolt
3/21 New mammal species found inside the crocodile
Fossilized bones digested by crocodiles revealed the existence of three new mammal species that roamed the Cayman Islands 300 years ago. The bones belonged to two large species of rodents and a small animal resembling a shrew
Museum of Natural History of New Mexico
4/21 Fabric that changes according to the temperature created
Scientists from the University of Maryland have created a fabric that adapts to heat, expanding to allow more heat to escape from the body when it is hot and compact. to retain more heat when it's cold
Faye Levine, University of Maryland
5/21 Tears from baby mice could be used in pest control
A study from the University of Tokyo found that the tears of baby mice make female mice less interested in men's badual advances
Getty
6/21 Last warning to limit the "climate catastrophe"
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a report in which it is projected the impact of a rise in global temperature of 1.5 degrees Celsius and warns against a faster increase
Getty
7/21 Nobel Prize for Chemists of Evolution
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to three chemists working with the evolution. Frances Smith receives the award for her work on the direction of enzyme evolution, while Gregory Winter and George Smith are rewarded for their work on phage display of peptides and antibodies
Getty / AFP
8/21 Nobel Prize for Laser Physicists
The Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to three physicists working with lasers. Arthur Ashkin (L) has been rewarded for his "optical tweezers" that use lasers to capture particles, atoms, viruses and other living cells. Donna Strickland and Gérard Mourou were jointly awarded the prize for the development of pulsed pulse laser amplification
Reuters / AP
9/21 Discovery of a new dinosaur species
Ledumahadi Mafube wandered about 200 million years ago in what is now South Africa. Recently discovered by a team of international scientists, he was the largest land animal of his time, weighing 12 tons and weighing 13 feet. In Sesotho, the South African language of the region in which the dinosaur was discovered, its name means "a giant thunderbolt at dawn"
Viktor Radermacher / SWNS
10/21 Birth of a planet
Scientists witnessed the birth of a planet for the very first time.
This spectacular image of the SPHERE instrument on ESO's very large telescope is the first sharp image of a planet caught red-handed training around the dwarf star PDS 70. The Planet appears clearly, visible as a bright spot on the right of the screen. center of the image, masked by the coronagraph mask used to block the blinding light of the central star.
ESO / A. Müller et al
11/21 New human organ discovered that scientists previously lacked
The layers long considered dense, connective tissue are actually a series of fluid-filled compartments that researchers have dubbed "interstitium".
These compartments are under the skin and line the intestines, lungs, blood vessels and muscles and join together to form a network supported by a network of strong and flexible proteins.
Getty
12/21 According to an archaeologist, a previously unknown society lived in the Amazon rainforest before the arrival of Europeans
Working in the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso, a team of archaeologists from the University of Exeter has uncovered hundreds of hidden villages deep in the rainforest.
These excavations included evidence of fortifications and mysterious earthworks called geoglyphs
José Iriarte
13/21 Study reveals traces of cocaine or heroin have occurred in one in 10 people
Scientists have discovered that more than one in 10 people had traces of Clbad A drugs on their fingers after developing a new fingerprint-based drug test.
Through a sensitive badysis of the chemical composition of sweat, researchers were able to differentiate between those who had been directly exposed to heroin and cocaine and those who had encountered it indirectly.
Getty
14/21 NASA publishes great images of Jupiter's big red dot
The storm is bigger than the Earth has swirled for 350 years. The colors of the image have been improved after returning to Earth.
Pictures of: Tom Momary
15/21 3D reconstruction of a gray parrot from Africa after euthanasia
Included in the Wellcome Image Awards, this 3D image of an African Gray Parrot shows the highly complex system of blood vessels.
Scott Birch. Welcome pictures
16/21 Baby Hawaiian Squid
Another winner of the Wellcome Images Award, this time from the baby squid Hawaiian. The black ink bag and light organ located in the center of the squid mantle cavity are clearly visible.
Macroscopic solutions. Welcome pictures
17/21 Skeletons of 5,000-year-old Chinese "giants" discovered by archaeologists
People are thought to be exceptionally tall and strong. Largest open skeleton measured at 1.9 m
Youtube
18/21 NASA discovers a hole in the sun 75,000 km wide
Sunspots are caused by interactions with the Sun's magnetic field and are colder areas on the surface of the star.
Nasa
19/21 View (active tab) Apple News New Workflow Modification Mailbox for Clear Cache NewsScience Revisions A 132 Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Fossil Discovered at a Surrey Plant
Paleontologists Sarah Moore and Jamie Jordan believe they have discovered an Iguanodon dinosaur, an herbivore about 3 meters tall and 10 meters long.
Cambridge Photographers / Wienerberger
20/21 The discovery of life on Mars is less likely, researchers discovering toxic chemicals on its surface
Echus Chasma, one of the largest source areas of water on Mars
Getty Images
21/21 An iris clip attached to the eye
This image is part of the Wellcome Images Awards and shows how an artificial intraocular lens is adjusted to the eye. Used for conditions such as myopia and cataracts.
University of Cambridge Hospitals NHS FT. Welcome pictures
Processes that involve the improvement of the conductivity of the nerves, the construction of neural networks and the "suppression" of unwanted connections begin in the uterus and continue for decades.
It is thought that a burst of upheaval in the brain explains the notoriously difficult behavior of teens, but does not necessarily end once people leave their adolescence.
"What we are really saying is that having a definition of when you are moving from childhood to adulthood seems increasingly absurd," said Professor Peter Jones, neuroscientist at the University of Cambridge, at an event in London.
"It's a much more nuanced transition that takes place over three decades.
"Systems such as the education system, the health system and the legal system make it easy to provide definitions."
However, he stated that these systems were adapting and that despite the legal definition of adulthood, experienced judges recognized the difference between a 19-year-old defendant and a "criminal" hardened "in the late thirties.
"There is no childhood and then adulthood. People are on a trail, they are on a trajectory, "said Professor Jones.
Professor Daniel Geschwind, from the University of California at Los Angeles, emphasized the degree of individual variability in brain development.
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He pointed out that, for practical reasons, education systems tended to erroneously favor groups rather than individuals.
Scientists have also discussed the impact that the environment could have on psychotic conditions such as schizophrenia, which result from a complex interplay of genetic and external influences.
The diagnosis of schizophrenia is more common in adolescents and young people in their early twenties, because once the brain has selected its circuits and finally "matured", the risk of psychosis decreases considerably.
Professor Jones said that urban dwellers, especially poor and immigrant populations, are at increased risk of mental disorders through a "powerful badtail" of environmental influences affecting brain development.
Studies have shown that minority populations can be up to three times more likely to suffer from schizophrenia.
"Being a migrant is not specifically about a particular group, but a minority within the majority," said Professor Jones.
"It's probably because you have to live constantly on the alert. I speak of the low level of vigilance of minorities when they live in host communities. "
Additional reports by PA
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