Nurturing a child early in life may help him or her develop a larger
hippocampus, the brain region important for learning, memory and stress responses,
a new study shows.
Previous animal research showed that early maternal support has a
positive effect on a young rat's hippocampal growth, production of brain cells
and ability to deal with stress. Studies in human children, on the other hand,
found a connection between early social experiences and the volume of the
amygdala, which helps regulate the processing and memory of emotional
reactions. Numerous studies also have found that children raised in a nurturing
environment typically do better in school and are more emotionally developed
than their non-nurtured peers.
Brain images shows that mother's love physically affects the volume of
her child’s hippocampus. In the study, children of nurturing had hippocampal volumes 10 percent larger than children whose mothers were not
as nurturing. Research has suggested a link between a larger hippocampus and
better memory.
"We can now say with confidence that the psychosocial environment
has a material impact on the way the human brain develops," said Dr. Joan
Luby, the study's lead researcher and a psychiatrist at the Washington
University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Mo. "It puts a very strong
wind behind the sail of the idea that early nurturing of children positively
affects their development."
The research is part of an ongoing project to track the development of
children with early onset depression. As part of the project,
Luby and her colleagues previously measured the maternal support that children
— who were ages 3 to 6 and had either symptoms of depression, other psychiatric
disorders or no mental health problems — received during a so-called
"waiting task."
The researchers placed mother and child in a room along with an attractively wrapped gift and a survey that
the mother had to fill out. The children were told they could not open the
present until five minutes had passed — basically until their mothers had
finished the survey. A group of psychiatrists, who knew nothing about the
children's health or the parents' temperaments, rated the amount of support the
mothers gave to their children.
A mother who was very supportive, for example, would console her child,
explaining that the child had only a few more minutes to wait and that she
understands the situation was frustrating. "The task recapitulates what
everyday life is like," Luby told LiveScience, meaning that it gives
researchers an idea of how much support the child receives at home
Now, four years later, the researchers gave MRI (magnetic resonance
imaging) scans to 92 children who underwent the waiting task. Compared with
non-depressed children with high maternal support, non-depressed children with
low support had 9.2 percent smaller hippocampal volumes, while the depressed ones with high and low support had
6.0 and 10.6 percent smaller volumes, respectively.
Though 95 percent of the parents in the study were the children's
biological mothers, the researchers say that the effects of nurturing on the
brain are likely to be the same for any primary caregiver.
Luby and her team will continue following the children as they grow
older, and plan to see how other brain regions are affected by parental
nurturing during preschool years.
"It's now clear that the care and affection a chid gains from the mother is not only good for
the development of the child, but it actually physically changes the
brain.
Thank you Bumie...this is very educative pls keep them coming
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