HUMAN BIOLOGY

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Development anD aging 347

What are the stages of human development?


  • Following birth, development proceeds through childhood
    and adolescence, which includes the arrival of sexual maturity
    at puberty.

  • Puberty is the gateway to the adult phase of life, including
    changes associated with aging.


taKe-Home message

puberty Onset of function-
ing of reproductive organs.
senescence Aging.

1 7. 1 2


cartilaginous plates near the ends
of long bones to harden into bone.
Humans stop growing by their early
twenties.

Adulthood is also a time of bodily change


Although in the United States the average life expectancy
is 74 years for males and 79 years for females, we reach
the peak of our physical potential in adolescence and early
adulthood. A healthy diet, regular exercise, and other good
lifestyle habits can help keep people vigorous for decades
of adult life. Even so, after about age 40, body parts and
their functioning begin to deteriorate. This process, called
senescence or aging, is a natural part of the life cycle of
all organ isms that have highly specialized cells. We take a
brief look at the possible causes and well-known effects of
aging in the following section.

n    A gene-dictated course of growth and development leads
to adulthood.

There are many transitions from birth to adulthood


Table 17.2 summarizes the prenatal (before birth) and
postnatal (after birth) stages of life. A newborn is called a
neonate. During infancy, which lasts until about 15 months
of age, the child’s nervous and sensory systems mature
rapidly, and a series of growth spurts makes its body
longer. Figure 17.23 shows how body proportions change
during childhood and adolescence. Puberty marks the
arrival of sexual maturity as a person’s reproductive organs
begin to function. Sex hormones trigger the appearance of
secondary sex char acteristics, such as pubic and underarm
hair and behavior changes. A mix of hormones triggers
another growth spurt at this time. Boys usually grow most
rapidly between the ages of 12 and 15, whereas girls tend
to grow most rapidly between the ages of 10 and 13. After
several years, the influence of sex hormones causes the

From Birth to adulthood


Prenatal Period


  1. Zygote Single cell resulting from fertilization

  2. Morula Ball of cells produced by cleavage

  3. Blastocyst Ball of cells with surface layer and inner
    cell mass

  4. Embryo All developmental stages from 2 weeks
    after fertilization until end of eighth week

  5. Fetus All developmental stages from the ninth
    week until birth (about 39 weeks after
    fertilization)
    Postnatal Period

  6. Newborn The first 2 weeks after birth
    (neonate)

  7. Infancy From 2 weeks to about 15 months
    after birth

  8. Childhood From infancy to about 12 or 13 years

  9. Pubescence Puberty, when secondary sexual traits
    develop; girls between 10 and 16 years,
    boys between 13 and 16 years

  10. Adolescence From puberty until about 3 or 4 years later;
    physical, mental, emotional maturation
    occur

  11. Adulthood Early adulthood (between 18 and
    25 years); bone formation and growth
    completed; changes proceed very
    slowly afterward

  12. Old age Aging culminates in general body
    deterioration


Table 17.2 Stages of Human development

2 months 3 months newborn2 513 22 years

© MitarArt/Shutterstock.com
Figure 17.23 Body proportions change during prenatal and
postnatal growth. (© Cengage Learning)

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