Good
mothering
changes
the
brain
July
1,
2004
Nature
Research
journals
and
World
Science
Staff
Among
rats,
good
mothering
changes
the
brain
in
a
way
that
improves
stress
response,
researchers
have
found.
That
in
turn
improves
the
offspring's
parenting
skills
as
an
adult.
In
times
of
stress,
the
brain
releases
hormones
that
give
rise
to
instinctive
stress
responses.
These
responses
may
serve
us
well
during
crises,
but
over
the
long
term,
the
brain
needs
a
mechanism
for
keeping
these
hormone
levels
under
control.
A
new
paper
in
the
August
issue
of
the
research
journal
Nature
Neuroscience
explains
how
physical
attention
from
the
mother
can
change
the
way
that
rats'
brains
deal
with
stress
for
the
rest
of
their
lives.
Michael
Meaney
and
colleagues
at
McGill
University
in
Montreal
previously
found
that
baby
rats
whose
mothers
spend
a
lot
of
time
licking
and
grooming
them
grow
up
to
be
less
fearful,
more
well-adjusted
adults,
who
in
turn
give
their
own
babies
the
same
kind
of
care.
While
a
baby
rat
is
being
licked
and
groomed,
the
brain
temporarily
boosts
activity
of
a
gene
that
makes
molecules
known
as
glucocorticoid
receptors
in
a
region
of
the
brain
called
the
hippocampus.
This
region
is
part
of
a
feedback
system
that
the
brain
uses
to
keep
stress
hormone
levels
under
control.
In
the
new
study,
the
authors
found
that
physical
mothering
also
causes
long-term
changes
in
the
gene
itself,
leading
to
tighter
control
over
stress
levels
for
life.
These
findings
demonstrate
one
striking
consequence
of
the
parental
environment
on
brain
development,
permanently
shaping
the
activity
of
a
gene
controlling
the
brain's
stress
responses.