the message board for Dubai English speaking community
kanelli wrote:What about all the other male forumers posting here all the time - you've never had a go at them for not spending all their time with their kids
Nucleus wrote:There is a research done that showed children who were close to their mother have slightly bigger brain. Not sure why the brain is bigger, but here is an educated guess maybe the portion that feels love gets bigger
And a maid.kanelli wrote:Nucleus, children need both of their parents and lots of love in general
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 have now revealed that a mother’s love physically affects the volume of her child’s hippocampus. In the study, children of nurturing mothers 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."
http://www.livescience.com/18196-matern ... brain.html
That is actually quite clear, you can take children who didn't have mother's care giving in early development vs those who did. It is quite easy to separate the two.kanelli wrote:""It's now clear that a caregiver's nurturing is not only good for the development of the child, but it actually physically changes the brain" Luby said, OR: "It's now clear that parents react more supportive to children who are endowed with larger hippocampal volumes."
" Recent evidence about reduction in brain volume following child abuse and neglect is also outlined."
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1 ... 1/abstract
That is the point.kanelli wrote:Of course parts of the brain may grow if there is stimulation and shrink if there is no stimulation
Not sure about that but there are research showing father and mother both affect the brain development differently. Why nobody knows and not much research has done into that since most caregivers are mothers. In short, it is possible that kind of brain simulation is only coming from mother or they are chemicials coming from mother that is affecting the brain development. Or it is possible it is just pshycologial and it maybe anyone besides a mother. Both are possible, above research is a 10 years study and it is still incomplete. Notheless, it does show positive effects of mother being close to a child.kanelli wrote: I'm suspicious of research that tends to paint only mothers as the most essential people for their children's neurological growth.
Nucleus wrote:Notheless, it does show positive effects of mother being close to a child.
Not sure about that anymore, new scientific discoveries are reveal new things like how certain chemicals are triggered. It is possible close a bond between actual mother and child triggers certain chemicals.Flying Dutchman wrote:It tends to go that way. The most important thing for the development of a child is a caring caregiver in the first place of course. Close proximity of the Mother, is deemed more and more pivotal, especially during the first three years of a child.