0:13 Teenagers 0:54 Why do they take risks? 1:38 Is it a phase? Underlying Causes? 2:19 Habituation, “Getting used to it” 3:18 An obstacle, we need teens to do this experiment 4:07 What drove Kashfia to do this experiment 4:45 Setting Up The Experiment 5:43 Computerized simulation 6:28 29 Days Later... The Results 6:51 8:23 The Impact of these results 9:48 She won 1st place. 10:33 Inspiration.
People with disabling fear issues often are caused by parents not allowing their kids to take risks. Very well known you need to expose people to the risks they fear willingly. So they can overcome them. Nothing new here but a great experiment and dedication, keep it up young lady.
Did you watch the video? She wasn't talking about overcoming fear by taking risks. She's saying that a lot of teenagers are taking too many reckless risks, and this turns off their fear instinct and puts them in dangerous situations. So basically she's in favor of more fear instead of less of it
i agree. helicopter parents can cause a more reckless teen. my friend was a preachers daughter and could never do anything growing up.. when she went away to college and was finally on her own, let just say she acted out...
Risky behavior isn't all bad. It depends on what someone learns from it. Someone that never takes risks lives in a very sheltered world and probably will be ineffective in dealing with certain things. To put it another way, there's an evolutionary reason why risky behavior happens and what is considered negative or positive has some gray areas based on one's cultural biases.
Yeah. Some teens say "Adults should just let teens drink alcohol with their friends or let them get high on drugs once or twice a month so that teens know when to stop when they make a mistake" but each time they do that, the more they will keep doing it. Even though they might know it's dangerous, they experience less guilt and fear each time they do it so this saying does not work. They might only stop when the damage is irreversible, like getting disabled after drinking and driving or speeding and getting into an accident.
Without comparing her data on teens to other age groups, it’s hard to accept her findings as being unique to teens. Common sense would suggest that ‘habituation’ would also occur for adults to some degree. The difference between the age groups will illuminate what is special about the teenage brain. Hopefully she can continue to refine her project with more data.
I have a feeling that as she expands her own mind with the knowledge she didn't have available at the point in her life when she was working on the project. It will only be natural that she comes back and expands on her original project.
You know if you dont test out your limits, how do you wanna know when you cross a line? Questions like these quite literaly tell you EXACTLY how a person is thinking... even if you sometimes have to ask weird question like "what if he just enjoys doing bad things?"
Nurture or Nature?? We try to control nature and create environments that are harmful rather than beneficial. Education is good but only if people have access to learn and practice the things they love and are natural at doing. But we rather pigeon hole people and force people into doing and learning things they don't want to do. But they are taught to be obedient and to follow their peers even if these peers are not the ones they should be following. Restriction of people's moments and thoughts is the same as a life prison sentence of the mind.
Foo-Wing Li Yeah, must of us just spend too much of their judgements focused on what society should teach to others... without understanding how much things we learned by force that drive us away from being "right" and mostly without remembering that the most precious things we learned in life became from high emotions, errors, failures, sufferings, risks, as well as love, joy, satisfaction. All this good words on habituation process, but how can she judge that risks are negative teachers? To me, not risky people really cut half of the things that are there to know and understand, so how can they decide that society should be even more "protective" to teenagers? Today's generation in so-called "developed" countries is growing even more brain dead than before just because we're overly superprotected and do not learn anything about real life, courage, limits of ideologies, problem solving.
That was a well spoken authentic talk.. loved it. congrats to this young lady. for her entrepreneur spirit and taking the time and effort to answer her why
you sound a lot like I was as a teen. I now think it was a combination of not having been allowed to be myself and being in a country school with very few like minded people. I had an exchange student year at age 17 in a large school where I found the other weirdos, and where I lived with a family who didnt limit me, but challenged me to grow, and that made all the difference for that year and for my life in general, even though the next year after returning home was even worse than before. Maybe your sadness is the way your brain is telling you to question what you've got going in your life right now so that when presented with the opportunities, you'll take the right steps to change your life towards a direction that suits you better.
@@lauraholmberg8675 dude, you're exactly like me. I want to be someone else but my school and society doesn't let me or at least let's me but will get criticized alot for it. My friends are just people i hang out with in school but i have one friend that i bond well with, we are very like minded. I really want to travel to another country but im not of age and that kinda makes me depressed because i ABSOLUTELY need to get away from this community i live in. But i personally i think my sadness comes from hormones because im going through puberty rn.
@@lauraholmberg8675 i know this is kinda out of place but somehow i ended up reading your reply again and it honestly motivates me every time i read it. Thank you.
I loved this talk ! This girl is a true inspiration, her love for science and research, her creativity and determination, and her curiosity... Keep it up! As a Muslim I am happy that you were able to overcome the obstacle of stereotypes and be who you want to be!
Excellent presentation. However, I am concerned with a girl from any strict background defining 'risk' and 'habituation'. This seems like a scientific end-run around liberty to dogma. Prohibition doesn't create discipline; experience and learning teach discipline, hence the phrase, 'live and learn'. Great job, despite my concerns. Keep learning. Keep teaching. You are an amazing young lady.
And if you pressed her for an answer to the question of if she would like to live in a sharia state, ultimately, her social conditioning would cause her to say yes. Just like the vast majority of practising 'moderate' muslims.
@@samitabbakh8409 In a way its not her thoughts and intentions that are important. Its highly likely that the dangerous elements of the islamic community would consider her saying that sharia is not an appropriate system for the modern age as apostasy and as a public figure could quite possibly ruin her life.
@@Aspartame69 I come from a muslim community, and I can assure you, very few people adhere to the sharia law. In fact, the word "sharia law" is mentioned in the west mush more than in any country with muslim majority. You are relying on stereotypes, but I don't blame you. Seeing 1 aspect of anything will skew your perception. Again, I don't mean to offend you. This is true for almost everybody.
I'm nearly 49 years old. I took lots of risks when I was a kid and a young adult. I learned to chill out over the years, but I probably should have not made it this far. People will tell you the "rules" but you can't know the real rules unless you push the limits...that goes for for man's rules and nature's rules. If you aren't pushing something or someone then you aren't living!
quick answer: teens are way too overpressured by both their parents and capitalism, and having to be perfect all the time in public means they need to let off steam. or we're so depressed by that point, that risky behavior doesnt seem all that risky since we want to die anyway
Capitalism means a voluntary exchange of goods and services. Obviously you are confusing it with Socialism where you are forced to labor against your will at whatever job a government decides you should do for a basic wage you get no matter your competence. ...that always leads to mass death and tyranny. .....you really shouldn't confuse the two.
its the same for the adults, the increased frequency of high impact headlines causes desensitization to major tragedies. I understand that it may be surprising, but the results seem standard with any other task. The more you challenege yourself, the less that challenge is the next time you do it.
How does Rahman answer the central question of her talk? What eveidence does she provide to support this main idea? How can her claim (about the consequences for students who lacked the feeling of fear and caution instincts) be said to be accurate? Does Rahman choice of evidence to use positively or negatively affect the way she makes her point? Would you describes Rahmans talk as effective in making the case for risk taking?
Such a great hope for the future. I was able to show “Science Fair” to my middle school students and hope it inspires them to dream big. Keep up the research!
Excitement, interest, and pleasure. Teens and the rest of us need them, the only issue is being happy without risking life changing harm. Schools and parents generally fail to feed the growing minds so the teens find their own excitement. Your little project illustrates directly how harmful activities can be replaced with meaningful excitement. Good going!
@sonoki82 Oh my sweet summer child, things are not so simple... You cannot reduce a human being solely to a tradition she was born into. Nor to sacred texts of the tradition. Humans will always find a way to bend the rules, to reinterpret. Especially those who have been raised in the West. I does not matter that islam cannot be reformed by clerics or equivalent of pope, reform happens in minds of its believers. In the US, young muslims already are more liberal. I believe, that friendship is the key (but also, firm boundaries). And around 50% of muslim countries have secular law, that must have accounted for something too. Also, back to this girl: she is smart, educated and liberated enough to pursue science. She will be an example for other young muslim women to stand up for themselves and ask questions. Also, you can believe in God and be a scientist, if you compartmentalize a little. Or agnostic. And it won't impact your scientific career if you are careful enough with scientific method.
Shinrin Yoku Thank you. You beautifully articulated my thoughts. As a Muslim women who came here to listen a smart girl’s talk, i’m grateful for your response.
Well done, she is a role model for all girls. Having two teenagers, I find boys to be bigger risk takers, mostly stupid risks though... My daughter finds more positive opportunities, doesn't do stupid stuff.
Interesting experience and good talk. I think a lot of the downvotes might not have watched all the way through to Ms. Rahman's conclusion. There is definitely a need for positive risk taking; we need to test ourselves in order to learn what we are capable of. That's the very definition of taking risks, isn't it? When we're young it's good for our immune systems to go outside and play in the mud. When we're teens, doing stupid things helps build a knowledge base of sorts that allows you to better gauge risks, and the resilience to take them when appropriate. Like all things, too much of either can be harmful, of course, but with parents to help moderate, they can be good for you in the long run. My one real criticism is the mention of policy. Children and teens need to learn to resolve their own conflicts without the intervention of adults or the state all the time.
I also think a lot ideas come from teens because they are more willing to take risks instead of an adult who has become stuck in their ways. I think curbing that youthful tendency would have a detrimental effect on innovation.
I gots some doubts about that research paradigm. Y'all gonna make inferences about actual risk-taking behaviour based on kids clicking on a computer terminal? Really?
Thank You, my son and I heard her on the radio today and we were listening wondering how she conducted this study. She said "simulated risk" 86 students over 12 days. This is her study? Is this how the future generations will do research? First of all, How do you simulate risk? I want to see her simulated risk program otherwise this is just hypothetical study that had nothing to do with reality. It's sad that this is the current state of science. People wonder why so many question climate change to the shape of our planet. This is why.
Your insight into the susceptibility of a rapidly developing and changing teen 🧠. And how repeateded exposure to impulsive choices, in relation to low and seemingly risk free behavior, will develop a higher risk of becoming an adult with a high risk level of behavior. Brovo...
So cool. Kids have fun doing things nice and repeat doing it because it was fun in the first place. It almost seems as if the absence of negative feedback benefitted negative behaviour. Like a dog that begs and gets treats. WOW. I really needed to do studies to figure that out.
A promising researcher I'm sure, and I'm impressed she invested in the emotive headset with her own money. But for the presentation, she should explain how habituation, guilt and all the other statistics are measured. All she has are a few final graphs. How far is this generalizable? What method was used with EEG for detecting risk-taking? The presentation is lacking, full of assertions and statements with no statistics to show for it. Algorithms used?
Spoken like a true american, presenting risk as something bad, and glorifying guilt. Perheps her subjects, like her, got more comfortable with the risk, and felt a mastery over it. Would love to see if this was discussed further in her work
The most important thing is to be able to learn from taking those risks. Teenage is the best time to test out and it's twice as useful with some good feedback. Great talk, looking forward to more research results ;)
Good talk, but isn't there a little bit of brain-shaming going on here :-). I think back on my time as a teenager and maybe the dumb risky things that we did had something to do with incomplete brain chemistry, but if I remember right it was a combination of learning something for ourselves being an important form on knowledge (which also means that we didn't know any better), failing to understand just how permanent permanent actually is (aka casts are cool), and holding people who take great risks in high regard (the Evel Knievel effect). That last one is quite important to teenage boys because once we grasp an understanding of the men we are hoping to become we also start to realize just how far we have to go and how lacking we may be, so anything which proves to ourselves or our peers just how strong and/or indestructible we are is a good thing. Unless it kills you.
0:13 Teenagers
0:54 Why do they take risks?
1:38 Is it a phase? Underlying Causes?
2:19 Habituation, “Getting used to it”
3:18 An obstacle, we need teens to do this experiment
4:07 What drove Kashfia to do this experiment
4:45 Setting Up The Experiment
5:43 Computerized simulation
6:28 29 Days Later... The Results 6:51
8:23 The Impact of these results
9:48 She won 1st place.
10:33 Inspiration.
Golf clap 👏👏👏👏
really useful for an 11 min video. Great job.
FOR ALLAH!
@@monkadelic13 there is no time frame for jeehad tak 😂
Thank goodness
Michael Pisciarino thanks man
Wow, she's a great public speaker! Better than a lot of other Ted speakers... Great tone, storytelling, timing... 👏👏👏
She never missed a word! She has a bright future ahead of her.
@@ttbalog she just wrote all of this how is this great public speaking your reading
This the proof that you shape your own brain and design your own reality!
Did it need proof? Is it not or was it never simply common sense?
Then she shaped her own brain
around a murderous cult.
@@20alphabet Huh?
Basically
@@TrindyForce he is just being ignorantly racist....let him drown in his sorrows.
People with disabling fear issues often are caused by parents not allowing their kids to take risks. Very well known you need to expose people to the risks they fear willingly. So they can overcome them. Nothing new here but a great experiment and dedication, keep it up young lady.
Dave Scruton this is very true! I know kids who were overly sheltered and judge others bc they didn’t have the chance to take risks
Did you watch the video? She wasn't talking about overcoming fear by taking risks. She's saying that a lot of teenagers are taking too many reckless risks, and this turns off their fear instinct and puts them in dangerous situations. So basically she's in favor of more fear instead of less of it
i agree. helicopter parents can cause a more reckless teen. my friend was a preachers daughter and could never do anything growing up.. when she went away to college and was finally on her own, let just say she acted out...
Stephanie Sy LOL!!!! There were so many people who upvoted his comment too! You can only laugh really
Risky behavior isn't all bad. It depends on what someone learns from it. Someone that never takes risks lives in a very sheltered world and probably will be ineffective in dealing with certain things. To put it another way, there's an evolutionary reason why risky behavior happens and what is considered negative or positive has some gray areas based on one's cultural biases.
She has incredible skin. Also love how you're one of the few who has a question and follows through with finding the answer.
Thanks mom and dad for not letting me do stuff that was considered normal for growing up. I'm cynical af and have high anxiety. ;/
Yeah. Some teens say "Adults should just let teens drink alcohol with their friends or let them get high on drugs once or twice a month so that teens know when to stop when they make a mistake" but each time they do that, the more they will keep doing it. Even though they might know it's dangerous, they experience less guilt and fear each time they do it so this saying does not work. They might only stop when the damage is irreversible, like getting disabled after drinking and driving or speeding and getting into an accident.
I remember Kashfia from the movie/documentary "Science Fair." There are some amazing kids doing some amazing things out there!
Without comparing her data on teens to other age groups, it’s hard to accept her findings as being unique to teens. Common sense would suggest that ‘habituation’ would also occur for adults to some degree. The difference between the age groups will illuminate what is special about the teenage brain. Hopefully she can continue to refine her project with more data.
I have a feeling that as she expands her own mind with the knowledge she didn't have available at the point in her life when she was working on the project. It will only be natural that she comes back and expands on her original project.
good point. Let's continue to encourage her ❤
Didn’t study for Math exam. Lemme take this risk!
Hydro oof
That is works for me. if you want to learn math, once they teach it to you, you will keep it
You know if you dont test out your limits, how do you wanna know when you cross a line? Questions like these quite literaly tell you EXACTLY how a person is thinking... even if you sometimes have to ask weird question like "what if he just enjoys doing bad things?"
Hint: It changes an adults brain too 😉
tide pod eaters = brain dead
Brick Tamland hi brick
Thanks!
she's a very good speaker
so inspiring 👍👍👍 this girl has such a great way of expressing
DOING ANYTHING CHANGES YOUR BRAIN.
I've translated this video into Arabic for TED talks, hoping to be useful for all Arabic speakers and others who are interested in.
Risk taking provides evolutionary advantages. Its why this behavior exists.
Children have always driven the benefits of change.
It's all about taking risks guys..but to buy a head electrical thing instead of iPhone..oh man i can't take that risk...totaly worth it👏👏
Nurture or Nature?? We try to control nature and create environments that are harmful rather than beneficial. Education is good but only if people have access to learn and practice the things they love and are natural at doing. But we rather pigeon hole people and force people into doing and learning things they don't want to do. But they are taught to be obedient and to follow their peers even if these peers are not the ones they should be following. Restriction of people's moments and thoughts is the same as a life prison sentence of the mind.
Foo-Wing Li Yeah, must of us just spend too much of their judgements focused on what society should teach to others... without understanding how much things we learned by force that drive us away from being "right" and mostly without remembering that the most precious things we learned in life became from high emotions, errors, failures, sufferings, risks, as well as love, joy, satisfaction. All this good words on habituation process, but how can she judge that risks are negative teachers? To me, not risky people really cut half of the things that are there to know and understand, so how can they decide that society should be even more "protective" to teenagers? Today's generation in so-called "developed" countries is growing even more brain dead than before just because we're overly superprotected and do not learn anything about real life, courage, limits of ideologies, problem solving.
That was a well spoken authentic talk.. loved it. congrats to this young lady.
for her entrepreneur spirit and taking the time and effort to answer her why
Im going through my teenage years. Im good at school and social interactiona but im kinda sad all the time
Most people are but don't say it. Courage isn't fearlessness it is overcoming fear.
you sound a lot like I was as a teen. I now think it was a combination of not having been allowed to be myself and being in a country school with very few like minded people. I had an exchange student year at age 17 in a large school where I found the other weirdos, and where I lived with a family who didnt limit me, but challenged me to grow, and that made all the difference for that year and for my life in general, even though the next year after returning home was even worse than before. Maybe your sadness is the way your brain is telling you to question what you've got going in your life right now so that when presented with the opportunities, you'll take the right steps to change your life towards a direction that suits you better.
@@lauraholmberg8675 dude, you're exactly like me. I want to be someone else but my school and society doesn't let me or at least let's me but will get criticized alot for it. My friends are just people i hang out with in school but i have one friend that i bond well with, we are very like minded. I really want to travel to another country but im not of age and that kinda makes me depressed because i ABSOLUTELY need to get away from this community i live in. But i personally i think my sadness comes from hormones because im going through puberty rn.
@@lauraholmberg8675 i know this is kinda out of place but somehow i ended up reading your reply again and it honestly motivates me every time i read it. Thank you.
Rock-climbing is a perfect example of risk-taking. It certainly affected me in a positive way. Life-choices etc.
Wow, very well presented by such a young lass. Good talk, interesting topic, glad that Kashfia embraced her curiosity.
“When I was sixteen...”
Wait how old r u
I loved this talk ! This girl is a true inspiration, her love for science and research, her creativity and determination, and her curiosity... Keep it up! As a Muslim I am happy that you were able to overcome the obstacle of stereotypes and be who you want to be!
Excellent presentation. However, I am concerned with a girl from any strict background defining 'risk' and 'habituation'. This seems like a scientific end-run around liberty to dogma. Prohibition doesn't create discipline; experience and learning teach discipline, hence the phrase, 'live and learn'. Great job, despite my concerns. Keep learning. Keep teaching. You are an amazing young lady.
She is so lucky to live and be in America. All this and her personality would be impossible in Bangladesh
And if you pressed her for an answer to the question of if she would like to live in a sharia state, ultimately, her social conditioning would cause her to say yes. Just like the vast majority of practising 'moderate' muslims.
Bangladesh isn't Afghanistan. All pisslamic countries not that bad.
@@Aspartame69 You speculate about other people thoughts and intentions before even knowing them. Can you be more ignorant?
@@samitabbakh8409 In a way its not her thoughts and intentions that are important. Its highly likely that the dangerous elements of the islamic community would consider her saying that sharia is not an appropriate system for the modern age as apostasy and as a public figure could quite possibly ruin her life.
@@Aspartame69 I come from a muslim community, and I can assure you, very few people adhere to the sharia law.
In fact, the word "sharia law" is mentioned in the west mush more than in any country with muslim majority.
You are relying on stereotypes, but I don't blame you. Seeing 1 aspect of anything will skew your perception.
Again, I don't mean to offend you. This is true for almost everybody.
I'm nearly 49 years old. I took lots of risks when I was a kid and a young adult. I learned to chill out over the years, but I probably should have not made it this far. People will tell you the "rules" but you can't know the real rules unless you push the limits...that goes for for man's rules and nature's rules. If you aren't pushing something or someone then you aren't living!
quick answer: teens are way too overpressured by both their parents and capitalism, and having to be perfect all the time in public means they need to let off steam. or we're so depressed by that point, that risky behavior doesnt seem all that risky since we want to die anyway
Capitalism means a voluntary exchange of goods and services. Obviously you are confusing it with Socialism where you are forced to labor against your will at whatever job a government decides you should do for a basic wage you get no matter your competence. ...that always leads to mass death and tyranny. .....you really shouldn't confuse the two.
Ms. Rahman you should write a book👍
its the same for the adults, the increased frequency of high impact headlines causes desensitization to major tragedies. I understand that it may be surprising, but the results seem standard with any other task. The more you challenege yourself, the less that challenge is the next time you do it.
she's so well spoken and enthusiastic about what she's doing. props to her.
1:50 Lets let them choose the most important life decisions then!
How does Rahman answer the central question of her talk?
What eveidence does she provide to support this main idea?
How can her claim (about the consequences for students who lacked the feeling of fear and caution instincts) be said to be accurate?
Does Rahman choice of evidence to use positively or negatively affect the way she makes her point?
Would you describes Rahmans talk as effective in making the case for risk taking?
Answer pls
Such a great hope for the future. I was able to show “Science Fair” to my middle school students and hope it inspires them to dream big. Keep up the research!
Excitement, interest, and pleasure. Teens and the rest of us need them, the only issue is being happy without risking life changing harm. Schools and parents generally fail to feed the growing minds so the teens find their own excitement. Your little project illustrates directly how harmful activities can be replaced with meaningful excitement. Good going!
This is so inspiring aaaaa. they be researching things and taking risks out there while I'm here staring on a screen nd looking at pixels.
Bruh this is really scary. I’m 26 and I feel like there’s a long way to go with development.
I'm here because i need it for my modules, but i guess I'm gonna watch TED's videos now. I learn a lot ty
Sometimes in life you had to risk to achieve something.
Anybody here in 2019?
Oops!!
Bilal live not funny
@@moe7451 exactly 😌
@@moe7451 anyone here in 2050?
She has the spirit of Hermione ^_^
@sonoki82 Oh my sweet summer child, things are not so simple... You cannot reduce a human being solely to a tradition she was born into. Nor to sacred texts of the tradition. Humans will always find a way to bend the rules, to reinterpret. Especially those who have been raised in the West. I does not matter that islam cannot be reformed by clerics or equivalent of pope, reform happens in minds of its believers. In the US, young muslims already are more liberal. I believe, that friendship is the key (but also, firm boundaries).
And around 50% of muslim countries have secular law, that must have accounted for something too.
Also, back to this girl: she is smart, educated and liberated enough to pursue science. She will be an example for other young muslim women to stand up for themselves and ask questions.
Also, you can believe in God and be a scientist, if you compartmentalize a little. Or agnostic. And it won't impact your scientific career if you are careful enough with scientific method.
Shinrin Yoku Thank you. You beautifully articulated my thoughts.
As a Muslim women who came here to listen a smart girl’s talk, i’m grateful for your response.
@sonoki82 How exactly does her veil falsify every point i made? I am not an apologist, i am just aware, that things are not black and white.
@@blackcristal128 Thank you for kind comment.
@sonoki82 why does people like you still exist
I wonder what'd happen were this to be tested on adults.
Oh, and she should make that simulator open to use, I'd happily contribute data.
Well done, she is a role model for all girls. Having two teenagers, I find boys to be bigger risk takers, mostly stupid risks though... My daughter finds more positive opportunities, doesn't do stupid stuff.
This is what i tell my teachers and parents.. But they have habituation to higher teenage ignorance whatever that means
Her conclusion would be further strengthened if she repeated the experiment with adults and children and got different results
I’m here just for learning English 🙃
🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
Proud.
yup... sums up what happened to me. regret my decisions to this day
I love this TedTalk! She did excellent!👏🏾🤲🏾
Really good speaker. Quite an insightful research she has conducted. Kudos to the girl
Wow so everyone did that whole DARE thing if 5th grade 😂😂😂😂
She is far from understanding this because she has not looked at life beyond her book of steps that she is Only allowed to agree with etc.
You always have to start somewhere.
There are obviously exceptions in teenagers that have better decision making and less risk taking
This gave me a great idea! Good talk!
Interesting experience and good talk. I think a lot of the downvotes might not have watched all the way through to Ms. Rahman's conclusion.
There is definitely a need for positive risk taking; we need to test ourselves in order to learn what we are capable of. That's the very definition of taking risks, isn't it? When we're young it's good for our immune systems to go outside and play in the mud. When we're teens, doing stupid things helps build a knowledge base of sorts that allows you to better gauge risks, and the resilience to take them when appropriate. Like all things, too much of either can be harmful, of course, but with parents to help moderate, they can be good for you in the long run.
My one real criticism is the mention of policy. Children and teens need to learn to resolve their own conflicts without the intervention of adults or the state all the time.
I also think a lot ideas come from teens because they are more willing to take risks instead of an adult who has become stuck in their ways. I think curbing that youthful tendency would have a detrimental effect on innovation.
To be, or not to be: that is the question (William Shakespeare) logic 👏🏻
I gots some doubts about that research paradigm.
Y'all gonna make inferences about actual risk-taking behaviour based on kids clicking on a computer terminal?
Really?
Thank You, my son and I heard her on the radio today and we were listening wondering how she conducted this study. She said "simulated risk" 86 students over 12 days. This is her study? Is this how the future generations will do research?
First of all, How do you simulate risk? I want to see her simulated risk program otherwise this is just hypothetical study that had nothing to do with reality.
It's sad that this is the current state of science. People wonder why so many question climate change to the shape of our planet. This is why.
Excellent work! I am sure we will be hearing more about in the future.
Andito ka dahil sa What's more in English 3rd Quarter week 3 aminin mo
Sensacinal !!! Merece muito reconhecimento
Its inherent in human nature we evolved from psychopaths that were willing to punch a mammoth in the mouth.
Edward Leas never looked at it that way before
*Risk takin is essential to foster a true masculine man.*
There is sufficient research that proves that testosterone makes you take more risks. Kinda bad and good at the same time.
Your insight into the susceptibility of a rapidly developing and changing teen 🧠. And how repeateded exposure to impulsive choices, in relation to low and seemingly risk free behavior, will develop a higher risk of becoming an adult with a high risk level of behavior.
Brovo...
Any one who can help me summarize about this talk
So all her research really found was that people who take risks will find it easier and easier to take more risks?
Teenagers are dumb, saw this guy hold himself from one side of a skyscraper.
Edit: he did it once with one hand then died on the next try.
No, it's just certain people who don't do the most intelligent things.
Well explained Kashfia 💪💪
How many participants did she have in her study
imagine what this young lady is going to accomplish when she has the tools of an university...
Great job Kashfia! 👏👏Very interesting study & results.
Interesting! Thanks
I'm having the biggest intellectual crush on this girl right now
Bruh she looks like them fucking things where its a person in a small person in a smaller person in a tiny person in a tinyer person
@@joseph_7474 bruh they're called matryoshka and notice where I said "I N T E L L E C T U A L" crush
@@joseph_7474 R/woooosshh
simp
proud of you sister keep up the good work and insha'allah we'll see you some day developing the science research to the better
Who els watching this for school
I'm here because of my English module.
Awesome Ted talk informative and very well put together
She's so great.
Maravilhoso conteúdo para reflexão! Fiquei encantada com a sabedoria e maturidade desta adolescente, parabéns...
So cool. Kids have fun doing things nice and repeat doing it because it was fun in the first place. It almost seems as if the absence of negative feedback benefitted negative behaviour. Like a dog that begs and gets treats. WOW. I really needed to do studies to figure that out.
"eat tide pods for a challenge" no one actually does that lmao
Duria r u dumb
Oh they did
A promising researcher I'm sure, and I'm impressed she invested in the emotive headset with her own money. But for the presentation, she should explain how habituation, guilt and all the other statistics are measured. All she has are a few final graphs. How far is this generalizable? What method was used with EEG for detecting risk-taking? The presentation is lacking, full of assertions and statements with no statistics to show for it. Algorithms used?
Issue her a blank cheque and say "go, do science". Check in every couple of years to make sure that she's actually doing science with the money. Easy.
Great how was ur new research
I'm going to steal her research idea
This girl is on Research Fair documentary!!!!!!!!!!!
Spoken like a true american, presenting risk as something bad, and glorifying guilt. Perheps her subjects, like her, got more comfortable with the risk, and felt a mastery over it. Would love to see if this was discussed further in her work
The most important thing is to be able to learn from taking those risks. Teenage is the best time to test out and it's twice as useful with some good feedback.
Great talk, looking forward to more research results ;)
Great speech..I actually hade to watch it twice because I was to concentrate on her beautiful smile 😊
It's not taking risks it's no being lame
i here for school
come here after watched National Geographic Science Fair
Didint she essentially increase the risk taking measures of the kids of the trial leaving them more likely themselves to take dangerous risks 🤔
Over sixteen because I don't want to go to jail.
Good talk, but isn't there a little bit of brain-shaming going on here :-).
I think back on my time as a teenager and maybe the dumb risky things that we did had something to do with incomplete brain chemistry, but if I remember right it was a combination of learning something for ourselves being an important form on knowledge (which also means that we didn't know any better), failing to understand just how permanent permanent actually is (aka casts are cool), and holding people who take great risks in high regard (the Evel Knievel effect). That last one is quite important to teenage boys because once we grasp an understanding of the men we are hoping to become we also start to realize just how far we have to go and how lacking we may be, so anything which proves to ourselves or our peers just how strong and/or indestructible we are is a good thing. Unless it kills you.
Why are there soo many army personnel and cops in that one room?
7:35
She might be young but apparently she know how to "highlight" data by not starting your charts at zero.
Nice grammar!
Beautiful speech
What evidence does she provide to support this main idea
Module brought me here.