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The brain is physically mature when a person reaches their teen years. This, however does not mean that the person is mature or has such mental processes to be considered mature.
Thalamus
Prefrontal cortex, bud.
Ventilation occurs under the control of the autonomic nervous system from parts of the brain stem, the medulla oblongata and the pons. This area of the brain forms the respiration regulatory center, a series of interconnected brain cells within the lower and middle brain stem which coordinate respiratory movements. The sections are the pneumotaxic center, theapneustic center, and the dorsal and ventral respiratory groups. This section is especially sensitive during infancy, and the neurons can be destroyed if the infant is dropped and/or shaken violently. The result can be death due to "shaken baby syndrome".
A part of the brain called the hypothalamus sends signals to the pituitary gland to produce growth hormone (GH), which then travels through the bloodstream to function in other parts of the body. GH is one of the things that controls growth from infancy to adulthood.
yes if there not getting with they need
That would be during Adolescence. C:
no.
The brain is physically mature when a person reaches their teen years. This, however does not mean that the person is mature or has such mental processes to be considered mature.
Brain plasticity is at its peak in infancy. An infant's brain is a brain that is still capable of adjustment. The same cannot be said of an adult brain.
about 21 or 22
Thalamus
Sometimes incorrectly done procedures during birthInadequate or insufficient stimulation during infancy and childhoodPhysical traumaExcessive radiationExcessive heatExcessive pressureOxygen starvationStrokeLong-term alcoholism and/or continuing to drink with a physiological dependence on alcoholSeveral drugs if misused enoughMother's substance abuse during pregnancy
M. Kathryn Hammock has written: 'Cranial computed tomography in infancy and childhood' -- subject(s): Brain, Brain Diseases, Diagnosis, Head, In infancy and childhood, Pediatric neurology, Radiography, Skull, Tomography, Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Kristina Virkola has written: 'The lateral ventricle in early infancy' -- subject(s): Diseases, Brain, Newborn infants, Brain damage
Isabelle Rapin has written: 'Children with brain dysfunction' -- subject(s): Brain Diseases, Brain-damaged children, Cognition disorders in children, Infancy and childhood, Pediatric neuropsychology
Prefrontal cortex, bud.