Facebook Teens: Wild, Crazy and Rugged.

The stories of teens getting into trouble on or through Facebook seem to be getting more numerous by the day. In the past week, we’ve seen reports of teens having the police called on them for a brawl that broke out at a party advertised on Facebook, and others that were arrested after posting videos of their criminal activity on the popular social network. Yet another teen has been arrested for harassing another user through Facebook. What’s gotten into teenagers these days? Facebook teens 300x225

Their actions are nothing new. The platform for sharing their stories, however, is landing some teens in some very hot water. In a now familiar scenario, the police were called to a party that became rowdy when hundreds of teenagers tried to crash an event that was posted on Facebook, according to The Daily Mail. This is the latest in a string





of similar situations in the UK where a private party advertised on Facebook reached the masses and led to dangerous fall-outs resulting in injuries and property damages.

The Hartford Courant also reports that 18-year-old Ian Guilfoil in Newtown, Connecticut has been charged with three felony counts of risk of injury to a minor and misdemeanor charges of reckless endangerment and reckless driving after he posted a video of himself performing these criminal acts. How did Guilfoil get caught up? A parent saw the video on Facebook and called the police.

Guilfoil isn’t the only Newtown teen that has been arrested due to their Facebook activity. A 15-year-old girl was charged Monday with harassment for allegedly threatening her fellow student via Facebook.

Have we learned nothing from MySpace, folks?

With all the cool features and games and applications to be found on social networking platforms like Facebook, it’s easy to forget that such online sites are in fact ways in which to carry out social acts, many of which easily mimic activity we see in the offline world. So seeing teens act in such a manner isn’t necessarily surprising, it’s just too easy to avoid. I was once a stupid teen on social networks, and have admittedly learned my lesson on what to share and what not to share. And given today’s privacy options (especially on Facebook) there’s even fewer excuses for the teens of today.

The takeaways (teens, pay attention):

1. Keep private party advertisements private. Granted, it’s easy enough for another user to share your private invite with a few hundred of their closest friends, but try to instill a sense of exclusivity at private parties. And get your parents to hire security.

2. Don’t post illegal activity on the web. Matter of fact, don’t video tape yourself in the act of performing criminal acts. But if you must video tape yourself doing things that could get you arrested, don’t post it on a social network where sharing media across one’s social graph is par for the course.

3. Don’t harass other people via a social network. It’s highly traceable, even with all the anonymity of the web!

Such moments of lecturing from an ex-teen may seem redundant, but it could become a growing problem for Facebook. The social network has managed to avoid many of the teen-related stigmas that have plagued MySpace for the past couple of years. But with Facebook having opened its platform to all users , coupled with the extreme growth in traffic and popularity, Facebook may be stuck with this rap until the next fad comes along and takes the plight of overly-public teens with it.

Research: Why teens do crazy things?

cliff diving zoom 500x393 300x235Teenagers do crazy things, and the chemistry of their brains might explain why.

In a new study, scientists found that the adolescent brain is extra sensitive to the rewarding signals it gets when something better than expected happens. The discovery might help explain why teens take risks that don’t seem worth it to adults — from driving too fast to experimenting with drugs.

“Teenagers seek out these sorts of rewarding experiences, and this provides a little explanation for that,” said Russell Poldrack, a cognitive neuroscientist at the University of Texas, Austin. “In the long run, it may help us understand how addictions start and develop.”

To zero in on the neuroscience behind risk-taking behavior in adolescents, Poldrack and colleagues focused on a concept called prediction error, which describes the difference between what a person expects to happen and what actually happens.

If you anticipate a rich sip of full-bodied espresso, for example, but you end up gulping weak, watery, and burnt coffee, that’s a negative prediction error. If you expect nothing from a friend for your birthday but he gives you $20, that’s a positive error — far better than expected.

To test the brain’s reaction to positive prediction errors at different stages of life, the scientists enlisted 45 people, ranging in age from 8 to 30. Each participant was shown a series of abstract kaleidoscopic images and challenged to categorize the figures as logos belonging to one of two fictional colleges.

When they got an answer right, participants earned a small amount of money — between five cents and a quarter — and they all gradually learned which logos went with which colleges and which ones were worth more than others. There were a few twists, though: Sometimes, an answer that should’ve been correct was judged as wrong. Sometimes, a wrong answer was rewarded as a correct one. And sometimes, the reward was larger or smaller than the exercise indicated it should be.

With a mathematical model, the researchers were able to determine how much money each person expected to get with each answer and compare that with what they actually received. At the same time, fMRI’s showed what was happening in the brain.

Previous research has shown a surge of activity in a brain region called the ventral striatum when reality exceeds a person’s expectations. In the new study, just published in the journal Nature Neuroscience, the region’s response was highest in participants between 14 and 19 years old when they received more money than anticipated.

Brain activity in the ventral striatum is related to the release of dopamine, a nerve-signaling molecule that helps the brain process rewards and can be involved in addictions. With more dopamine flowing, a teenager is likely to feel that a risky behavior — when it ends well — is so much more rewarding than it might seem to a child or adult.

So, for example, the social rewards of staying out past curfew might outweigh the likelihood of getting in trouble for an adolescent. And the physical pleasure of getting drunk might outweigh the dangers, including the next day’s hangover.

Besides providing insight into how addictions might begin in adolescence, the new study might help parents channel their teens into more positive risk-taking activities, like playing sports or acting in school plays, suggested Adriana Galvan, a developmental cognitive neuroscientist at the University of California, Los Angeles.

“Adolescents are uniquely sensitive to the uncertainty in the world,” Galvan said. “Perhaps their willingness to engage in uncertainty is driven by the potential rewards that might result from that uncertainty. For them, the rewards loom so much bigger than the potential negatives.”

Homemade Bungee Jump for Teens

Homemade Bungee Jump for Teens