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Positive Parenting: Dads’ Gender Bias

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Little boys are full of energy, and little girls are early talkers.

Parents often describe the different sexes this way.

Today in Positive Parenting, new research suggests fathers may be encouraging these gender bias.

They may not realize it, but fathers interact differently with their daughters than their sons.

Anthropologists and psychologists at Emory University and the University of Arizona looked at brain scans and recorded 52 fathers as they interacted with their toddlers for two days.

They found that the fathers were more attentive, sang to their daughters, used more emotion and more analytical language, such as “all,” “below” and “much” while interacting with their daughters.

Fathers with daughters also used more words associated with the body, like “belly,” “fat” and “cheek.” fathers with boys engaged in more rough-and-tumble play and used more words related to achievement and power, such as “best,” “win,” “super” and “top.”

Fathers using more emotional language can help children learn how to express their own feelings and develop empathy for others.

This study suggests that fathers often use less of this language with boys.

Analytical language was linked to academic success for girls and the body-related words may lead to girls paying more attention to their looks at an early age.

Researchers suggest fathers be aware of how they are interacting with their sons and daughters. It can make all the difference in how they grow up.

The study notes that the cause of these differences in treatment is unknown.

Is it that a father’s behavior can make their child act a certain way, or that a child’s behavior can cause a father to act a certain way?

Scientists have yet to show which is most likely.

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