Does adolescence last until 32? Scientists unlock brain’s five eras

As humans reach four significant “turning points” in brain development at the ages of 32, 66, and 83, according to a new study, adolescence can continue until the age of 32.

The study examined nearly 4, 000 brain scans of participants ranging in age up to 90, as reported on Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications.

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Using this information, researchers analyzed the development of the brain and discovered that humans go through five “brain phases” as they grow, mature, and change, each with four significant life turning points.

Importantly, they discovered that changes in early adolescence do not occur until the human personality and intelligence “plateau” and “stabilize” until the age of 32.

Which five phases are there?

According to the study, there are five distinct phases in brain development and ageing:

  • From birth to age nine, from birth to age nine.
  • adolescence, nine to 32
  • Adulthood – 32 to 66
  • Ageing from 66 to 83 is how old you are.
  • Late ageing begins at 83.

When does a person’s brain change from one phase to the next?

Researchers found that the brain’s development at the ages of nine, 32, 66, and 83 was the most important as it adapted to new circumstances and circumstances between birth and old age.

The shifts are characterized by changes in personality, personality stabilization, “reorganisation,” and decline.

These are described further as follows:

0 to 9 years old from birth.

The brain’s grey and white matter quickly grew during this time.

White matter transmits that information to other parts of the nervous system, according to information from Johns Hopkins Medical in the United States.

According to Johns Hopkins, “white matter describes the lighter inner region of the brain while grey matter describes the darker outer region.” This is the spinal cord’s reversed arrangement: the white matter is inside and the grey matter is inside.

The authors of the new study claim that “the first few years of life are marked by synapses [the junctions where neurons meet and communicate with one another] and rapid increases in grey and white matter volume.

This age also coincides with the start of puberty, which occurs between the ages of eight and thirteen for females and between nine and fourteen for males, triggering significant hormone changes and significant neurological changes, it added.

Additionally, according to the report, hormone changes and a “neurobiological shift” led to an “increased risk” of mental health, cognitive, and behavioral disorders.

9 to 32 years old.

Prior to the age of 20, it was believed that adolescence started with puberty and ended with the age of 20. The study found that while puberty is the study’s starting point, the study’s conclusion is less clear.

According to the researchers, “the transition to adulthood is influenced by cultural, historical, and social factors, making it context-dependent rather than purely biological change.”

Our findings point to the possibility that adolescent topological development begins at around the age of 32 before brain networks launch a new topological development trend in Western nations (such as the UK and the United States of America).

The study found that, in contrast to other turning points in life, the brain experiences the “most directional changes and a significant shift in trajectory” by the age of 32, as this is when the brain’s white matter integrity and volume are rapidly increasing.

The authors did not provide an explanation for why this is the case in Western nations or provide an explanation of how adolescence persists in people in other parts of the world.

Adulthood – 32 to 66

The study found that while brain development accelerates rapidly during the first two stages of life, the longest phase, adulthood, is where the brain develops more slowly.

According to the study, “This period of network stability also corresponds to a plateau in personality and intelligence.”

Early ageing – 66 to 83

Although white matter integrity is declining during this stage, the brain does exhibit subtle changes in its connection patterns.

The brain no longer coordinates as a single whole, coordinating more independently in various regions.

With dementia and high blood pressure for many, both of which can cause the early stages of brain ageing, the early 60s represent a significant change in health and cognition.

Ageing later, at 83 years old.

Due to the small sample size, the study’s findings correlated with a declining trend in brain connectivity, the authors said, despite the lack of information on this stage of the brain’s development.

This may point to a true weakening relationship between structural brain topology in later life, they continued.

What makes this significant?

The most important finding of the report is the new study of adolescence.

Adolescence varies between 10 and 19 years old, according to the World Health Organization. Adolescence ended in the 20s, according to a report in the Lancet medical journal in 2018.

However, one of the study’s authors, Duncan Astle, a professor of neuroinformatics at Cambridge University in England, claimed that the new report advances our understanding of the brain’s vulnerabilities.

Arsenal vs Bayern Munich: UEFA Champions League – team news, start, lineups

Who: Bayern Munich vs. Arsenal
What: Matchday 5, League Phase, UEFA Champions League
Where: Emirates Stadium, North London, England, UK
When: Wednesday at 8pm (20:00 GMT)
How to follow: We’ll have all the build-up on Al Jazeera Sport from 17:00 GMT in advance of our text commentary stream.

In a heavyweight UEFA Champions League (UCL) matchup of the two dominant European megaclubs on Wednesday, English Premier League leaders Arsenal take on German Bundesliga’s Bayern Munich.

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Both clubs have perfect records in the League Phase of the competition, and both teams are ranked No 1 and No 2 in the current UCL standings.

Before their top-of-the-table clash at Emirates Stadium, what is all the news?

In the UCL League Phase, who have Arsenal and Bayern Munich currently defeated?

Bayern Munich leads the league standings with four victories and a maximum of 12 points against Chelsea (3-0), Pafos (5-1), Club Brugge (4-4) and, most recently, a victory over Paris Saint-Germain (2-1) at home in France on November 4.

Arsenal leads only their German rival in terms of points and goal difference, with 11 points behind. Athletic Bilbao (2 / 2)), Olympiacos (2 / 2), Atletico Madrid (4 / 4) and Slavia Praha (3 / 3) have all registered victories against them.

Inter Milan is the only team with a perfect 4-0 record in the competition.

Odegaard will face Bayern Munich in a game?

In what would be his first game since suffering a knee injury in early October, Arsenal captain Martin Odegaard has a good chance of starting for Bayern Munich.

The Norwegian midfielder is expected to be in the squad after training on Tuesday afternoon.

Odegaard is being considered for Wednesday’s game, according to manager Mikel Arteta.

For the previous game, “He]Odegaard was very close. We anticipate that he’ll be a part of the squad on Wednesday.

Martin Odegaard of Arsenal training at the London Colney, United Kingdom, on November 25, 2025 [Peter Cziborra/Action Images via Reuters]

Where did Bayern Munich and Arsenal finish last year’s Champions League?

The Gunners defeated Real Madrid in the quarterfinals (5-1 on aggregate), before falling to Paris Saint-Germain, who had previously reached the Champions League semifinals.

Bayern Munich’s UCL campaign came to an end in the quarterfinals against Inter Milan (4-3 overall).

last five matches form guide

Arsenal: W-W-W-D-W (Premier League, last result)

Bayern Munich: W-W-W-D-W (Bundesliga), last.

Arsenal-Bayern Munich: head-to-head

Bayern Munich won 1-0 (3-2 on aggregate) over Arsenal in the Champions League semifinal on April 17, 2024, making the Germans advance to the last four of the 2023-24 competition with Joshua Kimmich’s 63rd-minute header.

The teams have played each other 14 times, with Bayern dominating the historical contest:

  • 8 wins for Bayern Munich
  • 3 wins for Arsenal
  • Draws 3

news from the Arsenal team

With Kai Havertz (knee) and Viktor Gyokeres (hamstring) both still recovering from injuries, Arsenal will face Bayern without a recognized striker.

Gabriel Jesus will also need to be rested for the Champions League game despite having knee surgery and returning to full fitness.

He arrived sooner than we anticipated, to be fair, and quite close, according to Arteta.

He will have a new step to take with a game that we will arrange for him in the coming days. He will simply be knocking on the door after that.

Possible starting XI for Arsenal

Timber, Saliba, Hincapie, Lewis-Skelly, Eze, Zubimendi, Rice, Saka, Merino, Trossard, and Raya (goalkeeper) are present.

Team news for Bayern Munich

Kimmich, the player who put an end to Arsenal’s last game in 2024, was a question mark at the beginning of the week because of a knock he picked up during the FIFA international break, but is now expected to be back on Wednesday.

Luis Diaz, an explosive winger, is a disciplinary defender for the Arsenal game. Lennart Karl, a rising 17-year-old star, who started for Bayern against Brugge on October 22 and became the club’s youngest champions league scorer in his debut.

Jamal Musiala and Alphonso Davies, who have injuries, won’t be selected for selection.

Harry Kane, who has returned to his native London for this game, will once again lead the charge under the guidance of Bayern manager Vincent Kompany.

Possible starting XI for Bayern Munich:

Neuer (goalkeeper), Laimer, Upamecano, Tah, Guerreiro, Pavlovic, Kimmich, Olise, Karl, Gnabry, Kane, and Laimer

Harry Kane, bayern Munich players in action.
On November 25, 2025, at the Bayern Munich Training Center in Munich, Germany, Harry Kane, center, and Nicolas Jackson, second from right [Angelika Warmuth/Reuters]

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Pro-Palestine conference leaders sue Berlin officials who shut down event

Berlin, Germany – Organisers of a pro-Palestine conference are suing authorities in Berlin who shut the event down last April soon after it began.

They hope a panel of judges at the Berlin Administrative Court will rule that police acted unlawfully in cracking down on the Palestine Congress, a forum of solidarity activists and human rights experts who were gathering to discuss Israel’s genocide in Gaza and Germany’s alleged complicity.

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The hearing begins on Wednesday.

The defendant, the State of Berlin, argues the police were right to act preemptively as they predicted criminal statements would be made at the conference, specifically incitement to hatred, dissemination of propaganda or use of symbols of unconstitutional and “terrorist” organisations.

The police justified this prediction in part on the basis that in a news conference held prior to the event, organisers allegedly did not distance themselves from the Hamas-led incursion into southern Israel on October 7, 2023.

On the day in question, April 12, 2024, officers in riot gear descended in their hundreds on the venue usually used for wedding receptions and pulled the plug – cutting off the power to ensure that none of the planned speeches could be heard or broadcast via livestream.

“I’m not aware of any other instance where a conference was shut down without any crime having been committed,” Michael Ploese, the lawyer representing the conference organisers, told Al Jazeera.

He said that German law only allowed restrictions on gatherings in private rooms where there was  high probability that a criminal act would be committed, and that the right to freedom of expression usually took precedence.

Among the groups organising the conference was Juedische Stimme (Jewish Voice), a sister group of the US collective of the same name that organises Jewish peace activists who are critical of Israeli actions regarding Palestine.

“I saw it as a success that we had even been able to begin it at all, but I wasn’t expecting it all to end an hour later,” said Wieland Hoban, the chair of Juedische Stimme, who gave opening remarks at the conference.

Adding to the sense of repression, the British Palestinian doctor Ghassan Abu Sittah, one of the main speakers, said officials at the airport in Berlin prevented him from continuing his journey and told him to return to the United Kingdom.

Yanis Varoufakis, the Greek left-wing economist and former minister of finance, posted online the speech he had planned to make. Like Abu Sittah, Varoufakis faced an entry ban after the furore. The Berlin Administrative Court later ruled that the ban on Abu Sittah’s political activity was unlawful.

Throughout Israel’s genocidal war against Palestinians in Gaza, German police and security services have repeatedly claimed protests in support of those being bombarded are anti-Semitic or are to be interpreted as revering Hamas. Thousands of individual protesters have been arrested, and many planned demonstrations have been banned outright.

Germany is Israel’s biggest diplomatic supporter in Europe and enforces strict limits on speech that criticises or attacks Israel, with some arguing this is necessary because of Germany’s genocide of six million Jews in the Holocaust.

It is a justification that Wieland Hoban rejects, saying the laws are even used against Jewish people who speak up for Palestine.

“Even if you lost family in the Holocaust, you can still be lectured by some German about what you can say,” said Hoban. “Simply mentioning the Holocaust can get you accused of relativierung” – a word that is used to suggest someone is playing down the Holocaust by drawing comparisons to other, lesser, crimes against humanity.

Last month, a group of United  Nations experts said they were alarmed by the “pattern of police violence and apparent suppression of Palestine solidarity activism by Germany”.

If this week’s case goes in favour of the conference organisers, it will be a blow to Germany’s controversial stance.

Videos of police using force to shut down nonviolent protests for Gaza on the streets of German cities have coursed around the world.

But what marked the state’s intervention in the Palestine Congress apart was that it represented the silencing of an event consisting of talks and debates in an indoor venue – a sphere of political expression that lawyers had previously thought was off-limits for police repression.