ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kashfia Rahman - Psychology researcher
Kashfia Rahman studies psychology, cognitive science and global health policy at Harvard University.

Why you should listen

The daughter of Bangladeshi immigrants, Kashfia Rahman grew up as a minority in a homogenous community in Brookings, South Dakota. When she was in high school, she noticed her peers frequently succumbing to risky behaviors as well as the ruthless burdens of stress and peer pressure. Working directly on peers at her school, she dedicated research to studying the neuroscientific and psychological processes underlying these behaviors, and how the environment plays a role in emotion-processing and cognitive functioning in teens. With the hopes of raising awareness to minimize the potential for engaging in harmful behaviors, she took her research to the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, a culmination of 1,800 students from over 75 countries sometimes described as the "Olympics of science fairs." For her research projects, she was awarded first place in her category as well as was recognized by the National Institutes on Drug Abuse and the American Psychological Association.

Rahman is also a Google Science Fair finalist and a Regeneron Science Talent Search Scholar. Featured in the National Geographic documentary Science Fair for her dedication to science research, Rahman is passionate about sharing her pathway to research and strives to expand the platform for marginalized and disempowered voices. She is also interested in bridging the gender and racial gap in the field of STEM and in advocating for healthy environments to improve teens' behavioral and mental health.

More profile about the speaker
Kashfia Rahman | Speaker | TED.com
TED Salon U.S. Air Force

Kashfia Rahman: How risk-taking changes a teenager's brain

Filmed:
2,067,475 views

Why do teenagers sometimes make outrageous, risky choices? Do they suddenly become reckless, or are they just going through a natural phase? To find out, Kashfia Rahman -- winner of the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (and a Harvard freshman) -- designed and conducted an experiment to test how high school students respond to and get used to risk, and how it changes their still-developing brains. What she discovered about risk and decision-making could change how we think about why teens do what they do.
- Psychology researcher
Kashfia Rahman studies psychology, cognitive science and global health policy at Harvard University. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
Have you ever tried
to understand a teenager?
0
542
4309
00:16
It's exhausting, right?
1
4875
2101
00:19
You must be puzzled by the fact
that some teens do well in school,
2
7000
4518
00:23
lead clubs and teams
3
11542
1892
00:25
and volunteer in their communities,
4
13458
2351
00:27
but they eat Tide Pods
for an online challenge,
5
15833
3935
00:31
speed and text while driving,
6
19792
2434
00:34
binge drink and experiment
with illicit drugs.
7
22250
3000
00:38
How can so many teens
be so smart, skilled and responsible --
8
26083
5393
00:43
and careless risk-takers at the same time?
9
31500
3601
00:47
When I was 16,
10
35125
1684
00:48
while frequently observing
my peers in person
11
36833
2685
00:51
as well as on social media,
12
39542
2142
00:53
I began to wonder why so many teens
took such crazy risks.
13
41708
4042
00:58
It seems like getting a certificate
from DARE class in the fifth grade
14
46583
3851
01:02
can't stop them.
15
50458
1310
01:03
(Laughter)
16
51792
1059
01:04
What was even more alarming to me
17
52875
1601
01:06
was that the more they exposed
themselves to these harmful risks,
18
54500
3726
01:10
the easier it became for them
to continue taking risks.
19
58250
4268
01:14
Now this confused me,
20
62542
2017
01:16
but it also made me incredibly curious.
21
64583
2542
01:20
So, as someone with a name
22
68083
1560
01:21
that literally means
"to explore knowledge,"
23
69667
2934
01:24
I started searching
for a scientific explanation.
24
72625
2667
01:28
Now, it's no secret
that teens ages 13 to 18
25
76458
3060
01:31
are more prone to risk-taking
than children or adults,
26
79542
3684
01:35
but what makes them so daring?
27
83250
2375
01:38
Do they suddenly become reckless,
28
86333
1976
01:40
or is this just a natural phase
that they're going through?
29
88333
3560
01:43
Well neuroscientists
have already found evidence
30
91917
2309
01:46
that the teen brain
is still in the process of maturation --
31
94250
2934
01:49
and that this makes them
exceptionally poor at decision-making,
32
97208
3476
01:52
causing them to fall prey
to risky behaviors.
33
100708
2500
01:56
But in that case,
if the maturing brain is to blame,
34
104250
3434
01:59
then why are teens
more vulnerable than children,
35
107708
2685
02:02
even though their brains
are more developed than those of children?
36
110417
3184
02:05
Also, not all teens in the world
take risks at the same level.
37
113625
3851
02:09
Are there some other underlying
or unintentional causes
38
117500
3476
02:13
driving them to risk-taking?
39
121000
1458
02:15
Well, this is exactly
what I decided to research.
40
123333
3542
02:19
So, I founded my research
on the basis of a psychological process
41
127833
3726
02:23
known as "habituation,"
42
131583
1935
02:25
or simply what we refer to
as "getting used to it."
43
133542
3083
02:29
Habituation explains how our brains
adapt to some behaviors,
44
137417
3726
02:33
like lying, with repeated exposures.
45
141167
3309
02:36
And this concept inspired me
to design a project
46
144500
2268
02:38
to determine if the same principle
47
146792
2392
02:41
could be applied to the relentless
rise of risk-taking in teenagers.
48
149208
4893
02:46
So I predicted that
habituation to risk-taking
49
154125
3309
02:49
may have the potential to change
the already-vulnerable teenage brain
50
157458
3935
02:53
by blunting or even eradicating
51
161417
2142
02:55
the negative emotions
associated with risk,
52
163583
2685
02:58
like fear or guilt.
53
166292
1333
03:00
I also thought because they
would feel less fearful and guilty,
54
168292
3351
03:03
this desensitization would lead them
to even more risk-taking.
55
171667
3500
03:08
In short, I wanted to conduct
a research study
56
176000
2351
03:10
to answer one big question:
57
178375
2559
03:12
Why do teens keep making
outrageous choices
58
180958
2601
03:15
that are harmful
to their health and well-being?
59
183583
2792
03:19
But there was one big obstacle in my way.
60
187292
2767
03:22
To investigate this problem,
61
190083
1935
03:24
I needed teenagers to experiment on,
62
192042
2684
03:26
laboratories and devices
to measure their brain activity,
63
194750
3726
03:30
and teachers or professors to supervise me
and guide me along the way.
64
198500
4559
03:35
I needed resources.
65
203083
1542
03:37
But, you see, I attended
a high school in South Dakota
66
205417
3017
03:40
with limited opportunity
for scientific exploration.
67
208458
3726
03:44
My school had athletics,
68
212208
2101
03:46
band, choir, debate and other clubs,
69
214333
3768
03:50
but there were no STEM programs
or research mentors.
70
218125
3309
03:53
And the notion of high schoolers
71
221458
1601
03:55
doing research or participating
in a science fair was completely foreign.
72
223083
4709
04:00
Simply put, I didn't exactly
have the ingredients
73
228750
2893
04:03
to make a chef-worthy dish.
74
231667
2208
04:07
And these obstacles were frustrating,
75
235000
2184
04:09
but I was also a stubborn teenager.
76
237208
2976
04:12
And as the daughter
of Bangladeshi immigrants
77
240208
2518
04:14
and one of just a handful
of Muslim students
78
242750
2101
04:16
in my high school in South Dakota,
79
244875
2184
04:19
I often struggled to fit in.
80
247083
2226
04:21
And I wanted to be someone
with something to contribute to society,
81
249333
4435
04:25
not just be deemed
the scarf-wearing brown girl
82
253792
2767
04:28
who was an anomaly
in my homogenous hometown.
83
256583
2208
04:31
I hoped that by doing this research,
84
259708
1726
04:33
I could establish this
85
261458
1435
04:34
and how valuable scientific exploration
could be for kids like me
86
262917
4392
04:39
who didn't necessarily
find their niche elsewhere.
87
267333
2500
04:42
So with limited research opportunities,
88
270833
2518
04:45
inventiveness allowed me to overcome
seemingly impossible obstacles.
89
273375
5143
04:50
I became more creative in working
with a variety of methodologies,
90
278542
4184
04:54
materials and subjects.
91
282750
2559
04:57
I transformed my unassuming school library
92
285333
3143
05:00
into a laboratory
93
288500
1768
05:02
and my peers into lab rats.
94
290292
2267
05:04
(Laughter)
95
292583
1185
05:05
My enthusiastic geography teacher,
96
293792
2767
05:08
who also happens to be
my school's football coach,
97
296583
3143
05:11
ended up as my cheerleader,
98
299750
1976
05:13
becoming my mentor
to sign necessary paperwork.
99
301750
3559
05:17
And when it became logistically impossible
100
305333
2060
05:19
to use a laboratory
electroencephalography,
101
307417
3101
05:22
or EEG,
102
310542
1309
05:23
which are those electrode devices
used to measure emotional responses,
103
311875
4226
05:28
I bought a portable EEG headset
with my own money,
104
316125
3143
05:31
instead of buying the new iPhone X
105
319292
1642
05:32
that a lot of kids my age
were saving up for.
106
320958
2292
05:35
So finally I started the research
107
323917
2517
05:38
with 86 students,
ages 13 to 18, from my high school.
108
326458
3334
05:42
Using the computer cubicles
in my school library,
109
330500
2809
05:45
I had them complete a computerized
decision-making simulation
110
333333
3560
05:48
to measure their risk-taking behaviors
comparable to ones in the real world,
111
336917
4184
05:53
like alcohol use, drug use and gambling.
112
341125
3768
05:56
Wearing the EEG headset,
113
344917
1809
05:58
the students completed the test
12 times over three days
114
346750
3934
06:02
to mimic repeated risk exposures.
115
350708
2851
06:05
A control panel on the EEG headset
116
353583
2476
06:08
measured their various
emotional responses:
117
356083
2643
06:10
like attention, interest,
excitement, frustration,
118
358750
3226
06:14
guilt, stress levels and relaxation.
119
362000
2875
06:17
They also rated their emotions
120
365542
1559
06:19
on well-validated
emotion-measuring scales.
121
367125
3226
06:22
This meant that I had measured
the process of habituation
122
370375
2851
06:25
and its effects on decision-making.
123
373250
2000
06:28
And it took 29 days
to complete this research.
124
376167
3101
06:31
And with months of frantically
drafting proposals,
125
379292
3226
06:34
meticulously computing data
in a caffeinated daze at 2am,
126
382542
4476
06:39
I was able to finalize my results.
127
387042
1875
06:41
And the results showed
that habituation to risk-taking
128
389708
2976
06:44
could actually change a teen's brain
by altering their emotional levels,
129
392708
4143
06:48
causing greater risk-taking.
130
396875
1625
06:51
The students' emotions
that were normally associated with risks,
131
399250
3643
06:54
like fear, stress, guilt and nervousness,
132
402917
3392
06:58
as well as attention,
133
406333
1643
07:00
were high when they were first
exposed to the risk simulator.
134
408000
3250
07:04
This curbed their temptations
and enforced self-control,
135
412167
3476
07:07
which prevented them
from taking more risks.
136
415667
2333
07:10
However, the more they were exposed
to the risks through the simulator,
137
418750
3934
07:14
the less fearful, guilty
and stressed they became.
138
422708
2875
07:18
This caused a situation
139
426667
1559
07:20
in which they were no longer able to feel
140
428250
1976
07:22
the brain's natural
fear and caution instincts.
141
430250
3601
07:25
And also, because they are teenagers
and their brains are still underdeveloped,
142
433875
4893
07:30
they became more interested and excited
in thrill-seeking behaviors.
143
438792
3750
07:35
So what were the consequences?
144
443708
1459
07:38
They lacked self-control
for logical decision-making,
145
446250
3059
07:41
took greater risks
146
449333
1726
07:43
and made more harmful choices.
147
451083
2101
07:45
So the developing brain alone
isn't to blame.
148
453208
3518
07:48
The process of habituation
also plays a key role in risk-taking
149
456750
3684
07:52
and risk escalation.
150
460458
2018
07:54
Although a teen's willingness to seek risk
151
462500
2393
07:56
is largely a result of the structural
and functional changes
152
464917
3226
08:00
associated with their developing brains,
153
468167
2767
08:02
the dangerous part
that my research was able to highlight
154
470958
3226
08:06
was that a habituation to risks
155
474208
2018
08:08
can actually physically
change a teen's brain
156
476250
2684
08:10
and cause greater risk-taking.
157
478958
1500
08:13
So it's the combination
of the immature teen brain
158
481333
2976
08:16
and the impact of habituation
159
484333
1976
08:18
that is like a perfect storm
to create more damaging effects.
160
486333
3375
08:22
And this research can help parents
and the general public
161
490917
3601
08:26
understand that teens aren't just
willfully ignoring warnings
162
494542
3142
08:29
or simply defying parents by engaging
in increasingly more dangerous behavior.
163
497708
5143
08:34
The biggest hurdle they're facing
is their habituation to risks:
164
502875
4018
08:38
all the physical, detectable
and emotional functional changes
165
506917
4351
08:43
that drive and control and influence
their over-the-top risk-taking.
166
511292
4333
08:48
So yes, we need policies
that provide safer environments
167
516667
3726
08:52
and limit exposures to high risks,
168
520417
2601
08:55
but we also need policies
that reflect this insight.
169
523042
3250
08:59
These results are
a wake-up call for teens, too.
170
527458
3018
09:02
It shows them that the natural
and necessary fear and guilt
171
530500
3476
09:06
that protect them from unsafe situations
172
534000
2851
09:08
actually become numb when they
repeatedly choose risky behaviors.
173
536875
3792
09:13
So with this hope to share my findings
with fellow teenagers and scientists,
174
541917
4976
09:18
I took my research
175
546917
1309
09:20
to the Intel International
Science and Engineering Fair, or ISEF,
176
548250
4351
09:24
a culmination of over 1,800 students
177
552625
2351
09:27
from 75 countries,
regions and territories,
178
555000
3643
09:30
who showcase their cutting-edge
research and inventions.
179
558667
3726
09:34
It's like the Olympics of science fair.
180
562417
2476
09:36
(Laughter)
181
564917
1184
09:38
There, I was able to present my research
to experts in neuroscience and psychology
182
566125
5143
09:43
and garner valuable feedback.
183
571292
2517
09:45
But perhaps the most
memorable moment of the week
184
573833
2976
09:48
was when the booming speakers
suddenly uttered my name
185
576833
3143
09:52
during the awards ceremony.
186
580000
1542
09:54
I was in such disbelief
that I questioned myself:
187
582125
3309
09:57
Was this just another "La La Land" blunder
188
585458
2643
10:00
like at the Oscars?
189
588125
1268
10:01
(Laughter)
190
589417
1434
10:02
Luckily, it wasn't.
191
590875
2268
10:05
I really had won first place
192
593167
1934
10:07
in the category "Behavioral
and Social Sciences."
193
595125
2518
10:09
(Applause)
194
597667
4708
10:16
Needless to say,
195
604042
1351
10:17
I was not only thrilled
to have this recognition,
196
605417
2767
10:20
but also the whole experience
of science fair that validated my efforts
197
608208
4935
10:25
keeps my curiosity alive
198
613167
2101
10:27
and strengthens my creativity,
199
615292
1976
10:29
perseverance and imagination.
200
617292
2625
10:32
This still image of me
experimenting in my school library
201
620792
3726
10:36
may seem ordinary,
202
624542
1976
10:38
but to me, it represents
a sort of inspiration.
203
626542
3809
10:42
It reminds me that this process
taught me to take risks.
204
630375
3976
10:46
And I know that might sound
incredibly ironic.
205
634375
3101
10:49
But I took risks realizing
206
637500
1934
10:51
that unforeseen opportunities
often come from risk-taking --
207
639458
4060
10:55
not the hazardous,
negative type that I studied,
208
643542
3142
10:58
but the good ones,
209
646708
1351
11:00
the positive risks.
210
648083
2143
11:02
The more risks I took,
211
650250
1726
11:04
the more capable I felt of withstanding
my unconventional circumstances,
212
652000
4726
11:08
leading to more tolerance,
resilience and patience
213
656750
2851
11:11
for completing my project.
214
659625
2143
11:13
And these lessons
have led me to new ideas
215
661792
3059
11:16
like: Is the opposite
of negative risk-taking also true?
216
664875
3559
11:20
Can positive risk-taking
escalate with repeated exposures?
217
668458
3976
11:24
Does positive action
build positive brain functioning?
218
672458
4185
11:28
I think I just might have
my next research idea.
219
676667
3559
11:32
(Applause)
220
680250
6208

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kashfia Rahman - Psychology researcher
Kashfia Rahman studies psychology, cognitive science and global health policy at Harvard University.

Why you should listen

The daughter of Bangladeshi immigrants, Kashfia Rahman grew up as a minority in a homogenous community in Brookings, South Dakota. When she was in high school, she noticed her peers frequently succumbing to risky behaviors as well as the ruthless burdens of stress and peer pressure. Working directly on peers at her school, she dedicated research to studying the neuroscientific and psychological processes underlying these behaviors, and how the environment plays a role in emotion-processing and cognitive functioning in teens. With the hopes of raising awareness to minimize the potential for engaging in harmful behaviors, she took her research to the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, a culmination of 1,800 students from over 75 countries sometimes described as the "Olympics of science fairs." For her research projects, she was awarded first place in her category as well as was recognized by the National Institutes on Drug Abuse and the American Psychological Association.

Rahman is also a Google Science Fair finalist and a Regeneron Science Talent Search Scholar. Featured in the National Geographic documentary Science Fair for her dedication to science research, Rahman is passionate about sharing her pathway to research and strives to expand the platform for marginalized and disempowered voices. She is also interested in bridging the gender and racial gap in the field of STEM and in advocating for healthy environments to improve teens' behavioral and mental health.

More profile about the speaker
Kashfia Rahman | Speaker | TED.com