NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Predictable and consistent parental behavior is key for optimal child brain development

  • Written by Tallie Z. Baram, Professor of Pediatrics, Anatomy and Neurobiology, Neurology, Physiology and Biophysics, Neurological Sciences, University of California, Irvine
imagePredictable and consistent parental behavior can include set routines for meals and transportation.Sue Zeng/Unsplash, CC BY-ND

Scientists have long known that the experiences you have during infancy and childhood play an important role in shaping how your brain matures and how you behave as an adult. But figuring out why this happens has been...

Read more: Predictable and consistent parental behavior is key for optimal child brain development

More Articles ...

  1. Pandemic's impacts on how people live and work may change city centers for decades to come
  2. Ukraine's foreign legion may be new, but the idea isn't
  3. How Octavia E. Butler mined her boundless curiosity to forge a new vision for humanity
  4. State funds for students at religious schools? Supreme Court says 'yes' in Maine case – but consequences could go beyond
  5. Americans gave a near-record $485 billion to charity in 2021, despite surging inflation rates
  6. Starving civilians is an ancient military tactic, but today it's a war crime in Ukraine, Yemen, Tigray and elsewhere
  7. What are PFAS, and why is the EPA warning about them in drinking water? An environmental health scientist explains
  8. Here's how to meet Biden's 2030 climate goals and dramatically cut greenhouse gas emissions – with today's technology
  9. Does hardening schools make students safer?
  10. Finland's and Sweden's pursuit of NATO membership is the exact opposite of what Putin wanted for Russian neighbors
  11. Kids' neighborhoods can affect their developing brains, a new study finds
  12. Scams and cryptocurrency can go hand in hand – here's how they work and what to watch out for
  13. Millions of years ago, the megalodon ruled the oceans – why did it disappear?
  14. At last, COVID-19 shots for little kids – 5 essential reads
  15. Jan. 6 committee hearings show what went right, not just what went wrong
  16. Mike Pence's actions on Jan. 6 were wholly unremarkable – until they saved the nation
  17. The history of Southern Baptists shows they have not always opposed abortion
  18. Wiccan celebration of summer solstice is a reminder that change, as expressed in nature, is inevitable
  19. The Jan. 6 hearings are tailor-made for social media – that doesn't mean they're reaching a wide audience
  20. Decades of research document the detrimental health effects of BPA – an expert on environmental pollution and maternal health explains what it all means
  21. What’s a bear market? An economist explains
  22. People couldn't look away from the Johnny Depp and Amber Heard trial – the appeal of a relationship drama held true in the 1700s, too
  23. What is Afrofuturism? An English professor explains
  24. How do drugs know where to go in the body? A pharmaceutical scientist explains why some medications are swallowed while others are injected
  25. Jesus' earthly dad, St. Joseph – often overlooked – is honored by Father's Day in many Catholic nations
  26. A celebrated AI has learned a new trick: How to do chemistry
  27. What's at stake as Colombians choose between Trump-like populist and leftist former guerrilla for president
  28. Your past is my present – how Volodymyr Zelenskyy uses history
  29. Comprender la 'crisis de la blasfemia' entre los países musulmanes y la India
  30. Babies don't come with instruction manuals, so here are 5 tips for picking a parenting book
  31. How math and language can combine to map the globe and create strong passwords, using the power of 3 random words
  32. When texts suddenly stop: Why people ghost on social media
  33. Summer reading: 5 books on the joys and challenges of LGBTQ teen and young adult life
  34. Coastal gentrification in Puerto Rico is displacing people and damaging mangroves and wetlands
  35. Juneteenth celebrates just one of the United States’ 20 emancipation days – and the history of how emancipated people were kept unfree needs to be remembered, too
  36. Trump-endorsed candidates would generally win even without his support – and that's usually the case with all political endorsements
  37. International courts prosecuting leaders like Putin for war crimes have a mixed record – but offer clues on how to get a conviction
  38. Social stress can speed up immune system aging – new research
  39. Trouble paying bills can take a heavy toll on fathers' mental health, leading to family conflict
  40. How we describe the metaverse makes a difference – today's words could shape tomorrow's reality and who benefits from it
  41. The James Webb Space Telescope is finally ready to do science – and it’s seeing the universe more clearly than even its own engineers hoped for
  42. Privacy isn't in the Constitution – but it's everywhere in constitutional law
  43. Legal fights persist over policies that require teachers to refer to trans students by their chosen pronouns
  44. 5 things to know about the Fed's biggest interest rate increase since 1994 and how it will affect you
  45. Woodward and Bernstein didn't bring down a president in Watergate – but the myth that they did lives on
  46. Tumblr's enduring appeal reveals the potency of the web's cultural memory
  47. EU law would require Big Tech to do more to combat child sexual abuse, but a key question remains: How?
  48. Fertilizer prices are soaring – and that's an opportunity to promote more sustainable ways of growing crops
  49. Satellites zoom in on cities' hottest neighborhoods to help combat the urban heat island effect
  50. Where the witches were men: A historian explains what magic looked like in early modern Russia