Why growing up in a loving home boosts children's brains and makes them more intelligent

Children in care have less grey and white matter than those brought up in a typical home environment

Research could explain why children in care are more likely to develop mental health problems

Study led by researchers from Harvard University and Boston Children's Hospital

Development: A loving family helps a child's brain to grow and makes them more intelligent, research suggests

A loving family helps a child's brain to grow and increases their intelligence and mental abilities, a study suggests.



Researchers found that children in care have less grey and white matter - the two components of the central nervous system - than those brought up in a typical home environment.



Children in foster families have normal levels of white matter, which relays messages in the brain, but less of the grey matter which contains nerve cells and controls muscles, memory, emotions and speech.



Scientists believe the findings could explain why children who spend time in care are statistically more likely to develop issues such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and mental health problems.



People who have been in care also have, on average, lower IQ and language skills than those who grew up in loving homes.



The differences in levels of grey and white matter is most likely to be due to varying levels of stimulation required for normal brain development, researchers said.



Many children in care have been exposed to deprivation and neglect, which could be linked to their lower levels of grey and white matter.

The improvement among those who were moved to foster families, however, indicates that it is possible to recover in terms of white matter, which affects learning ability.



The study team, led by researchers from Harvard University and Boston Children's Hospital, examined MRI scans from Romanian orphans aged between eight and 11, some of whom had been transferred to quality foster care homes.

Upbringing: Researchers made the findings after examining MRI scans from Romanian orphans aged between eight and 11

It has published almost 50 research papers since the project began .



Reporting their latest findings in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the reesearchers wrote: 'In most forms of institutional rearing, the ratio of caregivers to children is low, care is highly regimented and caregiver investment in children is low.



'One of the most likely explanations for the wide range of developmental problems observed among children exposed to institutional rearing is that the deprived environment of an institution does not provide adequate experience on which to scaffold normal brain development.'



One of the study's authors, Dr Charles Nelson, a developmental neuroscientist in Boston, said the findings suggested that there was a sensitive period in the first two years of a child's life, when foster care has the greatest impact on their progress.

