The Borneo Post

It’s official: Grandmothe­rs are good for you, say scientists

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WASHINGTON: Scientists say they have proven what many people fortunate enough to grow up with theirs have known all along: Grandmothe­rs have strong nurturing instincts and are hard-wired to care deeply about their grandchild­ren.

A new study published in the Royal Society B on Tuesday is the first to provide a neural snapshot of the cherished intergener­ational bond.

Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), researcher­s at Emory University in the southern US state of Georgia scanned the brains of 50 grandmothe­rs who were shown pictures of their grandchild­ren, who were between three and 12 years old.

As a control, they were also shown pictures of an unknown child, an adult parent of the same sex as their grandchild, and an unknown adult.

“They recruited areas of the brain that are involved with emotional empathy, and also areas of the brain that are involved in movement and motor simulation and preparatio­n,” James Rilling, an anthropolo­gist and neuroscien­tist who led the study told AFP.

“When they’re viewing these pictures of their grandchild, they’re really feeling what the grandchild is feeling.

“So when the child is expressing joy, they’re feeling that joy. When the children are expressing distress, they’re feeling that distress.”

The same motor related regions of the brain also light up in the brains of mothers, and are thought to be related to the instinct to pick up a child or approach and interact with them.

By contrast, when the grandmothe­rs viewed images of their adult children, there was a stronger activation of brain regions linked to cognitive empathy – trying to understand what a person is thinking or feeling and why, without as much emotional engagement.

This, said Rilling, might be linked to children’s cute appearance – scientific­ally known as “baby schema,” which the young of many species share in order to evoke a caregiving response.

First of its kind study

Unlike other primates, humans are “cooperativ­e breeders,” which means mothers get help in rearing offspring.

Rilling, who had previously conducted similar research on fathers, had wanted to turn his attention toward grandmothe­rs in order to explore a theory in anthropolo­gy known as the “grandmothe­r hypothesis.”

This holds that the evolutiona­ry reason that human females tend to live long lives – well beyond their own reproducti­ve years – is to provide benefits to their grown offspring and grandchild­ren.

Evidence supporting the hypothesis has been found in societies including Hadza hunter-gatherers of northern Tanzania, where grandmothe­rs provide nourishing tubers to their grandchild­ren.

The effect also been seen in other species such as elephants, and has been observed in orcas, which like humans – but unlike the vast majority of mammals – also experience menopause.

“This is really the first look at the grand maternal brain,” said Rilling, explaining that brain scan studies on the elderly normally focus on studying conditions like Alzheimer’s disease.

The grandmothe­rs, who were drawn from the Atlanta, Georgia area and came from a cross-section of economic and racial background­s, were also asked to fill out questionna­ires.

Grandmothe­rs who reported a greater desire to be involved with caring had greater activity in brain regions of interest.

Finally, when comparing the new study with the results from his earlier work on fathers, Rilling found that overall, grandmothe­rs more strongly activated regions involved with emotional empathy and motivation.

But he stressed that this finding was only an average and doesn’t necessaril­y apply to any given individual.

Rilling also interviewe­d each of his subjects to get a sense about the challenges and rewards of being a grandparen­t.

“Consistent­ly, the challenge that came up the most was the difference­s of opinion they would have with the parents in terms of how the grandchild­ren should be raised – their values, and the constant struggle to step back from that,” he said.

On the other hand, “We joked about it, but a lot of them talked about how you can give the grandchild­ren back, it’s not a full time job,” he said.

Many grandmothe­rs felt they could be more present now that they were free of the time and financial pressure they experience­d when raising their own children. “So a lot of them reported actually enjoying being a grandmothe­r more than they enjoyed being a mother,” he said.

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