Parenting
Mom Brain: Myth or Real?
It is a myth that women's cognitive capacities diminish before and after childbirth.
Updated July 31, 2024 Reviewed by Monica Vilhauer Ph.D.
Key points
- Parenting requires a huge amount of new learning and problem solving.
- The brains of new mothers are primed for this learning.
- The brains of new mothers become more flexible, competent, and resilient.
This is the seventh post in a series on The Transition to Motherhood.
In her book, Matrescence, Lucy Jones discusses the idea that society — and women themselves — often feel that childbirth and caring for young children diminish their memory and cognitive capacity. Women often complain of not being able to remember anything, being scatterbrained, or feeling stupid while they are pregnant and after they give birth.
But when looking at the research, Jones found the opposite!
In fact, it seems that having a baby concentrates the mind. The brain structure and the neurochemistry of the brain actually change in order to aid the mother to tune into her baby and her baby's needs. It may be that some of the old things the mother used to think about are less the focus of her attention after her baby arrives and she may feel less capable of concentrating on them — but this is far different from being "stupid."
In fact, Bridget Callahan, a researcher at UCLA, found evidence of enhanced learning, memory, and cognitive capacity after childbirth (Callahan, et al, 2022).
Of course, this makes sense, because new mothers need to expand their ability to tune in to their babies, to learn what helps and doesn't help their babies to feel comfortable, and to learn how to solve the many problems of everyday childcare.
In fact, in reviewing the literature, researchers Erika Barba-Müller et al found that there are structural and functional changes in the woman's brain both during pregnancy and following delivery which stimulate her to progress from being an individual with self directed needs to being responsible for her baby. These changes are highly adaptive and aid in the woman's transition to motherhood.
Similarly, in a review of the literature, Winnie Orchard found that there is evidence that the brains of pregnant women become more flexible, efficient, and responsive.
Minor difficulties in word finding and short-term memory often make women feel less competent during pregnancy and early motherhood — but this is not all that is going on.
Referring to Orchard again, Lucy Jones says that the lifetime impact of motherhood on cognition and the brain may be positive and that the cognitive load of adapting and adjusting to one or more growing children may help the brain to be resilient.
Think about it: So many people have started doing the daily word puzzles put out by the New York Times — as well as doing all sorts of gaming apps on their phones — in order to preserve and enhance their cognition. But these do not provide even a portion of the challenge that comes up in a day for the parent of a newborn or child of any age!
For a first-time mother — and her partner — the day they come home from the hospital is often a terrifying day. Suddenly, they realize that it is up to them to figure out how to care for their new baby and to keep them alive. Soon it is clear that caring for a newborn requires a completely new set of skills. And there is a great deal of trial and error. Every day new problems need to be solved. So much has to be learned — not just about babies in general — but about this particular baby, her sensitivities, and her preferences. And then, just as the parents are getting the hang of it, the baby starts a new sleep pattern, develops new feeding preferences, or enters a new developmental stage. And learning how to deal with these things requires a great deal more problem-solving.
So as for "Mom Brain" — yes, there is such a thing, but it is not what we often think it is. The Mom Brain is a more flexible, more competent, more resilient brain than the non-mom brain.
References
Barba-Müller, et al (2019). Brain plasticity in pregnancy and the postpartum period: links to maternal caregiving and mental health. Arch Womens Ment Health. 2019; 22(2): 289–299. Published online 2018 Jul 14. doi: 10.1007/s00737-018-0889-z
Callaghan, B. et al., (2022) "Evidence for cognitive plasticity during pregnancy via enhanced learning and memory", Memory 30(5) , p. 519-536.
Jones, Lucy (2023). Matrescence.
Orchard, E. R., et al., (2022) "The maternal brain is more flexible and responsive at rest: Effective connectivity of the parental caregiving network in postpartum mothers", bioRxiv