“…Thanks to a new generation of research, puberty is coming into focus as such a moment during which unique maturational milestones in physical, and consequently psychobehavioral, development are attained (Crone & Dahl, ). Although much of the pathbreaking work on sensitive periods, intergenerational transmission, and developmental origins of health and disease has focused on early life, particularly the “first thousand days” from gestation through infancy, many lines of evidence draw attention to puberty as a sensitive period of similar albeit distinctive importance (Scherf, Behrmann, & Dahl, ; Worthman, Tomlinson, & Rotheram‐Borus, ). Indeed, the emerging multidimensional biopsychobehavioral view of puberty plus recognition of the power of context in development blurs the distinction between puberty as a biological process and adolescence as a social construction, and foregrounds their biosocial, biocultural foundations.…”