Fatherhood is a powerful brain booster for involved parents: study

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By Leonardo Blair, Senior Reporter Friday, June 05, 2026FacebookTwitterGetty Images Getty Images

A new study has found that fathers who are actively involved in their children's lives receive a powerful boost in their cognitive abilities.

The study, "The paternal brain: longitudinal insights into structural and functional plasticity and attachment over 24 weeks postpartum," was published last month in the journal Translational Psychiatry. It tracked changes in gray matter volume and resting-state functional connectivity in the brains of 25 fathers immediately after childbirth and at three, six, nine, 12 and 24 weeks later.

Gray matter, according to the Cleveland Clinic, is a major type of tissue in the central nervous system that serves as the brain's information-processing center.

Researchers found that in the first six weeks after the birth of their child, gray matter volume in the brains of the fathers in the study decreased across almost all areas, before gradually stabilizing. From around 12 weeks onwards, it begins to grow in the areas of the brain responsible for planning and reasoning, as well as in the cerebellum, which is usually associated with motor control and emotion.

“Our findings reveal significant morphological and functional connectivity changes in the male brain following childbirth, with the first 6–9 weeks postpartum emerging as a critical period for paternal neuroplasticity,” said the researchers.

“These alterations follow a temporal pattern characterized by rapid, progressive adaptations to the new demands of fatherhood, followed by later refinements to support caregiving and attachment-related functions." 

While they did not identify the exact mechanisms behind the changes in the brains of the fathers, the researchers say the changes they observed “suggest a direct influence of childbirth, likely reflecting an evolutionary adaptation within the context of new fatherhood.”

“This is particularly highlighted by the restructuring of regions critical for parenting and the amygdala’s significant association with fatherly attachment, as the early postpartum period is a crucial window not only for paternal neural reorganization, but also for the development of paternal attachment itself,” the study states.

According to the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, America leads the world in single-parent household rates, and a significant majority of those households have no fathers. Data from 2023 shows that almost one in four, or approximately 19 million American children aged 0‒17 years, live in a household that has no biological, step, or adoptive father.

In 1960, only 11% of children in the U.S. lived apart from their fathers, according to the Pew Research Center.  By 2010, that share more than doubled to 27%. Pew also found that black fathers were more than twice as likely as white fathers to live apart from their children (44% vs. 21%), while Hispanic fathers fell in the middle at 35%. 

Some 40% of fathers who never completed high school were also found to be absent compared with just 7% of fathers who graduated from college.

In the 2013 study "The Causal Effects of Father Absence," researchers found strong evidence that the absence of fathers in the lives of their children negatively affects their social-emotional development, particularly in increasing externalizing behavior.

“These effects may be more pronounced if father absence occurs during early childhood than during middle childhood, and they may be more pronounced for boys than for girls,” researchers note. “Effects on social-emotional development persist into adolescence, for which we find strong evidence that father absence increases adolescents’ risky behavior, such as smoking or early childbearing.”

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