Unexplainable - Expecting: Baby brain
Episode Date: May 17, 2023Caring for a child seems to change parents’ brains. But what does that actually mean for how parents think and experience the world? For more, go to http://vox.com/unexplainable It’s a great place... to view show transcripts and read more about the topics on our show. Also, email us! unexplainable@vox.com We read every email. Support Unexplainable by making a financial contribution to Vox! bit.ly/givepodcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi. Hi. Hello.
A few months ago, we reached out to listeners to ask how becoming a parent had changed them.
We got a lot of responses with people describing a whole range of changes.
I feel like I was actually aware of my brain expanding and receiving and understanding new information.
I found that I am far more sensitive to light and sound.
Like, I'm hypersensitive to hearing every single thing, not just my baby's cries.
I feel like one of my ears is always trying to be aware what they're doing if they're safe,
that they're not about to hurt themselves whatsoever.
I didn't realize how much more emotional I was going to become after having my first child.
Way more emotional.
So much more emotional.
Before she was born, I never cried at movies.
Even the really sad ones.
My Girl, that movie from the 90s, where the kid dies from the bees, everyone cried at that movie.
Never did.
And then my daughter was born, and now I cry at everything.
Dog food commercials have done it and made me cry.
Some listeners told us they were more exhausted or more stressed.
Others told us they were actually less stressed.
A bunch of listeners said they could no longer listen to true crime if it involved a child.
Suddenly every baby is your baby.
But for most of our listeners, we heard one thing especially clearly.
My brain has definitely changed since having a baby.
Gosh, everything changed.
My brain changed for sure.
I don't even know where to start.
Everything's completely different.
And now, this is probably not a surprise, right?
Like most parents could probably tell you a story about how parenting changed them.
What is maybe more surprising is that these changes are still relatively under-researched
and not particularly well understood.
But as researchers have started to poke around
in the brains of pregnant people
and caretakers of kids a little bit,
they've realized that becoming a parent changes our brains
in structural and functional ways.
This is Chelsea Conno Boy.
She's a health and science journalist.
And she's also a mother.
And when she had her first kid,
she kind of dove into the research on parents' brains, like, so deep that she ended up writing
like a whole book about it. And in that process, she found more and more evidence for this big,
sort of relatively new hypothesis that becoming a parent is not just sort of a little forgetfulness
or like a lot of exhaustion. It's potentially a whole new developmental stage, which means that
that parenthood might be kind of a radical shift in who a person is,
where they develop, like, new behavior patterns, for example.
And in fact, it's a developmental stage that is as distinct as adolescents,
and it shapes us for the whole rest of our lives.
But in her reporting, Chelsea also realized that we know very, very little
about what that means for parents' personalities or their emotions
or even their mental health.
There's so much left to learn, not only for pregnant people, but also for other non-gestational parents.
I think we're still on the brink of understanding what this really means for the rest of our lives.
This is unexplainable. I am Bird Pinkerton.
And this is the second episode of Expecting our series about pregnancy.
In the last episode, we looked at how fetuses in the womb affect their parents on a cellular level.
But this week on the show, we are going to look at how children might continue affecting their parents' brains long after they have exited the womb.
So let's start with what we know here.
In the last few decades, scientists have gotten a lot more information about how infants change their parents' brains because they actually have tools that let them look at those brains.
So they've used brain imaging technology to sort of peer inside parental skulls.
and see changes to the brain's architecture.
Basically, it's structure.
In terms of structure,
there's been a fascinating set of studies
that were published by researchers in Spain
that I think are going to become like landmark
for this field.
One of these studies was published in 2016,
and it focused on a small sample of specifically women,
so 25 women who had given birth to infants and were raising them.
And basically, the researchers,
took images of these women's brains before they got pregnant, and then right after the woman had
their babies, they took more images. And then for some of the woman, they took even more images
a few years down the line. And what they found across pregnancy was that there was a significant
loss in gray matter volume. Which sounds bad, right? Like gray matter is the sort of like wrinkly
part of the brain that has lots of neurons. It's involved in information processing. Like
losing gray matter might seem concerning.
And when they first published this piece,
they were overwhelmed by responses from people saying,
oh, volume loss, like that explains why I can't remember anything.
This is actually a trope that's really common in pop culture,
this idea that there's kind of a brain fog that comes with parenting.
She's got a serious case of pregnancy brain.
Pregnancy brain.
So basically it's this idea that pregnancy has,
a negative effect on the brain.
And they were like, no, no, that's not it.
That's not the point here.
Volume loss can be associated with stuff like dementia.
But losing gray matter specifically does not always mean that the brain is working less well.
In fact, these researchers thought that this particular kind of loss of gray matter that they were seeing,
it reminded them less of dementia and more of the rewiring changes that teenage brains go through
during puberty.
Because teen brains also lose great matter.
And specifically during adolescence,
it correlates with a fine-tuning,
a pruning away of synapses
that aren't needed anymore
and a strengthening of those that are needed.
And like, teens do do some pretty wild things,
but in general, we think of the teenage brain
as developing and changing in ways that, like,
prepare them for the next stages of life.
Like, in teens, this sort of pruning
of gray matter is not a bad thing. So this Spanish group was sort of curious to see how strong
this parallel might be, like how similar was this kind of pruning in parents' brains to the
pruning in teen ones. And so what they decided to do was take their images from mother brains
and compare them to images of brains from both teenage girls and brains of women without kids.
And they found that in terms of like the scope and scale of volume loss in mothers and adolescent girls, it was very similar.
This doesn't necessarily mean that the exact same kinds of changes are happening in the brain when someone becomes a teen versus a parent.
But the scale of what happens across pregnancy and early parenthood is similar in terms of the degree of change of what happens during adolescence.
Now, a lot of these studies have small sample sizes, there's a lot more research to be done,
but for now, the tentative takeaway is that having an infant seems to change the brain's architecture in some way.
And then there's research that suggests kind of a further finding here.
This is in even more early stages, but it suggests that these changes they're seeing in the brain
might not come just from the pregnancy itself, or at least not entirely.
There's a study that was just published from some of the same researchers who did that really important
structural work in mothers, and this looked at fathers across time.
To be more specific, these were men who were not the gestational parent for their kid, but they were caretakers.
And the researchers used MRI machines to get pictures of these men's brains at a few different points in time,
like during their partner's pregnancy, and then again in the months after the baby was born.
And they again found volume loss across that time period.
Now, the results here were not as clear-cut as they were in the studies of the moms.
Like they did see some volume loss, but the results were a lot more mixed.
We can think of this study, though, as a suggestion that while the experience of pregnancy is really intense,
it's possible that the changes in the brain
may not just be limited to the parent who carries the fetus.
It seems like something about caring for an infant
might also change the brain,
whether or not that infant sat in a person's womb.
I didn't used to cry.
I was a typical man.
Now anything and everything they do
makes me cry at the drop of a hat.
I can cry about almost anything.
And again, there is still a lot more research to be done here to kind of nail down exactly what these structural changes are, how widespread they are, whether this all holds up if you're sort of looking at bigger groups of people.
But this idea that there are structural changes leads to kind of an interesting follow-up question, right?
Like, if the brain is changing physically, is it also changing how it acts, right?
Like, are there changes in how parental brains think?
And that is after the break.
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So, caring for an infant might reshape your brain, kind of changed the architecture in there
a little bit. But are parental brains actually doing anything different, right? Are they
thinking differently in some way? Chelsea Conno Boy found some researchers who are trying to answer
that question. And she walked me through what she found, starting with kind of the
trope that we mentioned before.
Pregnancy brain.
Pregnancy brain.
Again, this idea that the pregnancy kind of makes your brain foggy.
The research that we have so far shows that specifically during pregnancy, on average, small
and temporary deficits in memory loss are real.
At least for some people.
And this could be because this part of your brain called the hippocampus, which is associated
with memory, apparently kind of shrinks a bit during pregnancy.
but the hippocampus also seems to rebound afterwards.
And so Chelsea says that the emphasis should be placed on sort of temporary in temporary deficits.
But meanwhile, she heard from other scientists about other potentially more permanent changes that are kind of being overlooked.
The frustrating part of this like mommy brain narrative is like, okay, so those average temporary deficits may be real, but they're really just like one small piece.
of the picture here of like the cognitive changes that happen through parenthood.
The bigger picture is that a lot of the structural changes that researchers spotted in the brain
of both gestational and non-gestational parents, the changes that could be a little longer lasting,
those are in areas that are related less to memory and more to kind of like social cognition.
How we understand other people's mental states and emotions and reflect those things in ourselves.
There have been a bunch of studies around this.
And they rely on fMRI, so functional MRI,
which is basically where you stick a person in an MRI machine
and kind of see which parts of their brains are most active when they interact with stuff.
And in these studies, researchers took moms who had given birth to babies
and were kind of their caregivers,
and they pop them into fMRI machines to kind of take a peek at their brain activity.
And then they also looked at,
brain activity from people who were not caregivers for children, so kind of like non-parents.
And they compared how these two groups reacted to a variety of things.
Baby stimuli and non-baby stimuli.
So while they were in the machine, these subjects were sort of played sounds, for example.
Like a baby's cry versus some other harsh sound.
Mothers were also shown different faces.
There's often a lot of studies that do like known versus unknown babies,
so like your own baby versus another baby's face, smiling or crying.
Overall, these studies found that the mom's brains kind of reacted differently
than the brains of the non-parents.
Like social and emotional parts of their brains were reacting more strongly
to baby-related sounds and images,
especially sounds and images from their own babies.
So it seems like their brains had just,
change to become like super hyper zoomed in to the social and emotional needs of infants,
which makes sense, right?
Like parenting is this intense exercise in paying attention to kids.
It's thought that all of this like paying attention to our babies
fine-tunes our capacity to read and respond to their cues so that we can change with them
over time.
Their cues are constantly changing and we need to be really good at understanding them.
And also at the same time, be better at regulating our own emotions in the process because that's really hard work.
And here, again, there are some preliminary studies that suggests that the kind of key ingredient in all this is not pregnancy alone, but kind of caregiving in general.
Because there's not like a ton of research on non-gestational parents, but there are some studies here on gay dads.
And those studies do show sort of changes in dad's brains in how they sort of react to their babies.
It really like affirms the idea that experience matters, that when we do the work, we experience this neural adaptation to help us be better at it.
So that kind of loosely, broadly, is what we know so far, right?
Like caring for an infant may change sort of the structures of the brain.
and could change how the brain also interacts with the world.
What we don't know is so many other things.
Even if we just take the finding that sort of parents are paying super close attention to babies, for example,
does that mean they're only tuning into their babies,
or are they tuning into other social situations more too?
The short answer is that we really don't know.
But the researchers that I've talked to have said that they,
that this change in our social cognition probably applies to other particularly very close
relationships as well. Chelsea says that maybe in theory, right, like spending all this time
reading tiny, minute expressions and a being that can't talk makes you pay more attention
to nonverbal cues all around you. Or you could also be like, you know what? I only care about
my baby. I don't care about anyone else.
Like, there aren't great answers here.
And if people are changing, researchers also don't know how long those changes last, right?
Like, when you go through puberty, for example, you don't usually go back with a possible exception of a midlife crisis.
But are these changes to the parents similarly permanent?
There's really like a whole gap in our understanding here.
Like, what we have is primarily focused on the early postpartum period.
Which is to say, like, the research that we do have only looks at the first few months after an infant is born.
The researchers who studied the sort of volume loss in mothers' brains did follow up with some of the mothers six years down the line.
And found that most of that volume loss, with some small exceptions, is preserved at six years out.
So they've hypothesized that that may mean that these changes are permanent to some degree.
But we really have like all of middle age essentially and parenthood is unstudied.
Now, there are some studies that have kind of compared the brains of older adults.
People in their 50s, 60s, and 70s will pass their childbearing years.
Researchers sort of used images of these brains from brain imaging data banks in the UK and Australia to look at the brains of people who have been parents and people who have not.
not been parents. And they found that the brains of parents were what researchers called
younger looking. Literally, like, the ways that the parts of the parent brains were, like,
connected to each other and the size and volume of different parts of the parents' brains
looked more like a young person, like a little fresher or more spry. And if you think about it,
like, it makes sense. Parenthood is full of these intensely social.
ever-changing cognitive challenges.
So maybe parenthood is like doing a really great brain-boasting crossword puzzle for several decades.
And over time, like, this is something that could be potentially healthy for the brain in terms of, like, protecting function.
But again, this is all a lot of maybes, right? And who knows? Maybe it's possible that the people who are inclined to become parents have brains that skew younger-looking or something.
researchers are really just beginning to pull at all these under-explored threads here.
But if they can answer some of these questions,
like maybe they could also help explain some of the things that make parenting
so complicated and exhausting and exhilarating, stuff like sleep, for example.
We really don't know how sleep interacts with the changing parental brain.
Or like we could do a whole episode about how,
little we know about postpartum depression. There isn't just one postpartum depression. There's probably
lots of different postpartum depressions and all with different causes and potential treatments.
We don't really understand how SSRIs, these like commonly prescribed antidepressants,
how they function in the postpartum period. Partly because it seems like the serotonin system is
changed by pregnancy, and so therefore it's really hard to know how those drugs,
work. And what we do know is limited to like a pretty small portion of the population.
Overwhelmingly, the research to date has been in white, middle class, cisgender, heterosexual
women. This avalanche of questions just kind of reinforces something that I've encountered
throughout reporting this series. Like over and over and over, I keep hitting up against
the idea that reproductive health is just under explored and under-overns.
understood, which is weird to me.
Like, pregnancy is this fundamental thing.
Without it, none of us would exist.
And yet, having a kid is just this terrifying pit of mysteries.
Like, Chelsea herself hit on some of the realities of this when she gave birth to her son in 2015.
I just, I felt so worried about taking care of this tiny, vulnerable.
baby who I loved completely, but was also terrified of, you know, the responsibility of caring for him.
And for a while, that worry didn't go away. It kept growing.
I worried about his growth and whether he was getting enough food. I also worried about the
worry itself. She felt like there were just few good answers about what she was supposed to do,
like how to be a good parent, how to take care of this tiny being. And,
And for Chelsea, the kind of like research journey that she went on helped calm some of those fears.
What I learned as I looked more closely at this research is that becoming a parent is a process.
And we are shaped by our babies as much as we shape them.
But she agrees that the process of becoming a parent could be so much easier if we did have more answers.
more answers about what is happening to the fetus or the baby,
and more answers about what is happening to the parent when they have a kid.
We deserve to have the information about how our bodies and our brains are changed by that.
And we also deserve to have that be part of the cultural conversation
around what it takes to become a parent and how we as a society,
need to support people who are going through this really powerful developmental stage.
Next week on our expecting series, we'll have more of that cultural conversation about being a parent.
We're going to tackle kind of a narrow question, which is can expecting parents smoke weed?
But we'll use it to explore the ways that a lack of answers kind of shapes parents' lives
in frustrating and sometimes pretty scary ways.
Thanks again to Chelsea Connoboy for her help.
If you want to read more about the research that's been done
into parenting and brain development,
check out her book.
It's called Mother Brain,
how neuroscience is rewriting the story of parenthood.
It also dives into the fascinating history
around the idea of maternal instinct
and how that idea led some researchers astray for decades.
Thanks as well to all the listeners who reached out.
We couldn't use all of your voice memos, but we really appreciated them.
Huge thank you to Ria Ramjohn, Justin Corneli, Gabby Samalik,
Eduardo Alejandro, Melissa Lopez, Andy Nez, Allison Janard,
Hannah Martin, Alex, Alexis Cussman, Michelle Ball, Michelle Maring,
Douglas Stickle, Sarah Poulton, Liz LaPointe, Laren Gonzalez,
Ricardo Briscoe and Eli Patton.
This episode was reported and produced by me, Brad Pinkerton.
It was edited by Brian Resnick and Catherine Wells, as well as Meredith Hodnott, who runs the show.
We had sound design and mixing from Christian Ayala, music from Noam Hassanfeld,
Serena Solent, checked our facts, and Manding Nguyen rhymes with everything nice.
We have more articles about pregnancy unknowns, and you can check out Vox.com
slash unexplainable to read them.
You can also leave us a review
or email us with your questions and thoughts
at unexplainable at vox.com.
We really love hearing from you,
so please do that.
Unexplainable is part of the Vox Media Podcast Network
and we will be back next week
with another episode of Expecting.
