Say You Are 29? Scientists Say You are Not an Adult Yet!




                                                   
 Old men acting as little boys playing cowboys and indians except the indians here are real people they hurt
                               

[[Before I get any non adult messages , let me just say that this is an average as far as Iam concern. I know kids at 24 a lot more adult thana 70 year old precident of the United States with the codes to destroy the world. Who Am I? I'm Adam and I became an adult when I decided to take responsibility of who I was  and come out as gay to my mother and family. I was 24.]]
BBC
Have you ever been told to "grow up" in your 20s or need an excuse as to why you still find cat videos on the internet really funny?
Well now you might have an official reason as to why you're not acting like a mature adult.
People don't become fully "adult" until they're in their 30s, according to brain scientists.
Currently the UK law says you become a mature adult when you reach the age of 18.
Scientists who study the brain and nervous system say the age at which you become an adult is different for everyone.
Research suggests people aged 18 are still going through changes in the brain which can affect behaviour and make them more likely to develop mental health disorders.
3d illustration of human brain on technology background.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionScientists say the brain develops at different times in each person
Professor Peter Jones, from Cambridge University, said: "What we're really saying is that to have a definition of when you move from childhood to adulthood looks increasingly absurd.
"It's a much more nuanced transition that takes place over three decades."
He added: "I guess systems like the education system, the health system and the legal system make it convenient for themselves by having definitions."
When you reach 18, you can vote, buy alcohol, get a mortgage and are also treated as an adult if you get in trouble with the police.
Despite this, Professor Jones says he believes experienced criminal judges recognise the difference between a 19-year-old defendant and a "hardened criminal" in their late 30s.
"I think the system is adapting to what's hiding in plain sight, that people don't like (the idea of) a caterpillar turning into a butterfly," he said.
"There isn't a childhood and then an adulthood. People are on a pathway, they're on a trajectory."
Prof Jones is one of a number of experts who are taking part in a neuroscience meeting hosted by the Academy of Medical Sciences in Oxford.
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