Development of Self-Concept in Childhood and Adolescence: How Neuroscience Can Inform Theory and Vice Versa

Hum Dev. 2024 Dec;68(5-6):255-271. doi: 10.1159/000539844. Epub 2024 Jun 17.

Abstract

How do we develop a stable and coherent self-concept in contemporary times? Susan Harter's original work, The Construction of Self (1999; 2012), argues that cognitive and social processes are building blocks for developing a coherent sense of self, resulting in self-concept clarity across various domains in life (e.g., [pro-]social, academic, and physical). Here, we show how this framework guides and can benefit from recent findings on (1) the prolonged and nonlinear structural brain development during childhood and adolescence, (2) insights from developmental neuroimaging studies using self-concept appraisal paradigms, (3) genetic and environmental influences on behavioral and neural correlates of self-concept development, and (4) youth's perspectives on self-concept development in the context of 21st century global challenges. We examine how neuroscience can inform theory by testing several compelling questions related to stability versus change of neural, behavioral, and self-report measures and we reflect on the meaning of variability and change/growth.

Keywords: Adolescence; Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Neuroimaging; Self-concept; Theory.

Grants and funding

The first author received a grant from the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences (NIAS). The first and second authors were supported by a Gravitation program of the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture, and Science and the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO Grant No. 024.001.003).