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Physiological Changes in Adolescence by Nathan W. Shock - 1944Just as pediatricians
have discovered that the young child is not simply a miniature adult,
so students of human development have come to the realization that
the adolescent is neither child nor adult in his physiological reactions.
In the adolescent many new physiological adjustments are being made
which were unnecessary in the young child and which become stabilized
in the adult. Thus, adolescence may be regarded as a period of
physiological learning.To view the full-text for this article you must be signed-in with the appropriate membership. Please review your options below: This article originally appeared as NSSE Yearbook Vol 43, No. 1. |
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