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Child Brain Development

123 CHILD BRAIN DEUELOPMENT ASTOUNDING FACTS ABOUT THE AMAZING HUMAN BRAIN The brain is one of the first organs to develop in a human embryo, and it continues to change and mature for a person's entire life! ALL 100 uz3 BILLION nerve cells present in an adult's brain have been created by the time a fetus is six months old! 60% Newborn brain Toddler brain Adult brain Sixty percent of the human genome (a person's genetic makeup) - or 60 thousand genes -- is dedicated to brain development! A newborn's brain weighs 25 percent of its adult weight at birth. By two years of age, a toddler's brain has reached 75 percent of its adult weight! Embryo Development (by weeks) 1 2 3 4 5 12 20 32 Four weeks after conception, a thin layer of cells forms along the back side of the embryo. The cells continue dividing, and the layer, now the neural plate, thickens, eventually folding in on itself and forming a tube whose ends later fuse. The upper end will become the brain structure, and the lower end will form the spinal cord. The neural tube is the beginning of the embryo's central nervous system. One month after conception, 150,000 cells in the neural tube begin multiplying extremely fast -- at times, as many as 250,000 nerve cells, or neurons, are cre- ated per minute! 100,000 200,000 NPM 50,000 250,000 Neurons conduct electrical impulses, or signals, from the brain to the rest of the body, and from the body to the brain. All organs and body parts continuously send the brain status reports through tiny electric signals that are passed along a neuron's body, or axon, and out to the connecting points between neurons, or synapses. Neurons, then, support the brain's ongoing regulation and maintenance of the body's basic homeostatic processes, as well as the brain's processing of input from all five senses. At birth, most of the brain's 100 billion neurons are not yet interconnected. Heart Lnga Some neurons have been assigned to specific autonomic, life-sustaining functions (e.g., heart beat and breathing); but most have not yet been given a task and are inactive. These neurons now wait for the newborn to begin having sensory experiences -- seeing, smelling, hearing, tasting, feeling -- which will stimulate the neurons to form trillions of synapses, as well as establish neural communication pathways. Brain Growth and Development Age 1 Age 2 Age 3 The first three years of life are a period of fast growth in the human brain. A three-year-old's brain is twice as active as an adult's! Ways to enrich a toddler's brain and stimulate synaptic connections include having back-and-forth conversations, singing, reading, and playing together. Interactions with other humans, of any age, are a better method of stimulating a child's brain than watching television! Brain Growth Stages From around age 10 and above Frontal lobe duties most brain changes serve to improve function of the Motor function Problem-solving Memory Language Impulse control more sophisticated and versatile frontal lobes. Memory Educators rely on the young brain's plasticity -- its ability to be molded by experiences -- to teach school-age children. Repeating learned information, such as the spelling of words or multiplication tables, will form syn- aptic connections that will preserve those memories for life. Synaptogenesis Synaptogenesis, the formation of connec- tions between synapses that started in the womb, continues throughout childhood and into adulthood. Hippocampus The hippocampus is critical in the transition between short and long-term memory. Between Ages 13 & 15 3lbs (Špprox.) brain size and function increase, espe- cially in motor and spatial perception areas of the frontal cortex. About age 17 the brain goes through a secondi growth spurt when the frontal lobes increase in size again, as do their synaptic connections to the rest of the brain. Final adult brain weight of 1300 - 1400g (3 Ibs.) is reached in the late teens. Around this time, the pea-sized pituitary gland, located at the base of the brain, starts secreting different hor- mones into the bloodstream that will cause other organs to secrete hormones of their own -- giving way to sexual maturation and reproductive capability. By age 18 through periodic "pruning" -- the brain's shedding of weak connections between neurons -- the number of synapses in an 18-year-old's brain has been reduced from 1,000 trillion to 500 trillion -- the same number that an 8-month-old baby has! IGENETICS) The ongoing debate about the influence of nature (or genes) vs. nurture (or environment) in shaping a young person's brain -- and by extension, their personality - seems to be reaching a peaceful compromise, with most health and medical experts now agreeing that both nature and nurture can be, and are, important. Many of the genes or genetic predispositions in a person's genome can be swayed in one direction or the other, based on the experi- ences to which we're exposed from birth -- or even before birth. NURTURE LENVIRONIMENTD And in our age of increased vigilance over such factors as pollutants and maintaining healthy lifestyles, it's worthy of mention that avoiding toxins, eating healthy natural diets, and getting plenty of sleep and exercise will optimize the brain's potential, helping to keep it -- and the rest of our body -- healthy and happy. NATURE

Child Brain Development

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"would you please add my infographic to your site? , : , Child Brain Development Info Graphic. : Learn some amazing facts about the human brain and its development from conception on http://www.paren...

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