Sunday, November 17, 2024
Advertisement
  1. You Are At:
  2. News
  3. Lifestyle
  4. Fathers are more careful about daughter’s needs than son’s, study

Fathers are more careful about daughter’s needs than son’s, study

Fathers are more attentive to daughter's needs as compared to that of son's

India TV Lifestyle Desk New Delhi Published on: May 26, 2017 15:54 IST
father daughter relationship
Fathers are more careful about daughter’s needs than son’s, study

Fathers are more attentive and careful when it comes to the needs of their daughter than of their sons. This fact was revealed by a brain study that shows how a baby’s gender monitors the brain responses and behaviour in father. The study also revealed that fathers of girls are more vocal about their emotions like happiness and sadness whereas fathers of boys are more engaged in rough-and-tumble play. 

"If the child cries out or asks for dad, fathers of daughters responded more than did fathers of sons," said lead researcher Jennifer Mascaro, Assistant Professor at Emory University. 

Further, girls' fathers used more analytical language (words like all, below and much) which has been linked to future academic success, while with boys it was more achievement-related language (words such as proud, win and top). 

This may be possibly because fathers are more accepting of girls' feelings than boys', the researchers said in the paper published in the journal Behavioral Neuroscience. 

In addition, brain scans revealed that fathers of daughters had greater responses to their daughters' happy facial expressions in areas of the brain important for visual processing, reward, emotion regulation, and face processing than fathers of sons. 

"The gender-biased paternal behaviour need not imply ill intentions on the part of fathers. These biases may be unconscious, or may actually reflect deliberate and altruistically motivated efforts to shape children's behaviour in line with social expectations of adult gender roles that fathers feel may benefit their children," added James Rilling anthropologist at Emory.

For the study, the team used data from 52 fathers of toddlers (30 girls, 22 boys), who agreed to clip a small handheld computer onto their belts and wear it for one weekday and one weekend day.

Advertisement

Read all the Breaking News Live on indiatvnews.com and Get Latest English News & Updates from Lifestyle

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement