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아빠 뇌: 아버지가 되면 남성의 뇌는 어떻게 변할까

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핵심 요약

아버지가 되는 과정은 남성의 호르몬과 신경계에 모성에게서 주로 나타나는 것과 유사한 깊은 변화를 일으킵니다. 자녀 양육에 적극적으로 참여할수록 테스토스테론은 낮아지고 양육 호르몬이 증가하는 등 남성의 생물학적 특성이 크게 재구성됩니다. 이는 양육에 적극적인 아버지상이 단순한 현대의 문화적 산물이 아니라, 인간에게 깊이 뿌리내린 생물학적 본능임을 과학적으로 증명합니다.

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아빠 뇌: 아버지가 되면 남성의 뇌는 어떻게 변할까

아이가 태어나기도 전부터, 남성들은 행동에 강력한 영향을 미칠 수 있는 심각한 호르몬 변화를 겪으며, 이는 아이의 안녕에 중요한 결과를 가져온다.

아들이 태어나기 몇 달 전, 나와 파트너는 분만 준비 워크숍, 모유 수유 세션, 병원에서 운영하는 산전 교육 과정에 참석했고, 임신과 육아에 관한 작은 책 더미를 읽고 수많은 웹사이트를 검색했다. 우리의 메모장은 금방 가득 찼다. 그 당시 내 메모에는 여성의 몸이 출산과 모성을 준비하는 여러 가지 방법에 대한 세부 정보가 적혀 있었다. 호르몬이 급증하고 떨어지며, 장기들이 이동하고, 뇌가重塑(재형성)되는 등의 변화 말이다. 하지만 아무도 내 뇌와 몸 또한 아버지가 되기 위해 준비하고 있다고 말해주지 않았다.

내 아들이 돌이 훌쩍 넘었을 때, 나는 영장류학자 사라 블래퍼 흐르디(Sarah Blaffer Hrdy)의 책 <아버지의 시간(Father Time)>에서 그 개념을 처음 접했다. 그녀는 이 책에서 남성들이 '가장 헌신적인 어머니 못지않게 보호적이고 양육할 수 있는' 데 필요한 모든 생물학적 회로를 가지고 있다고 주장한다. 이는 내 호기심을 자극했다. 나는 적극적인 육아에 대한 확고한 신뢰자였지만, 이것이 우리 세대 남성들의 문화적 선택이라고 생각해왔다. 그러나 흐르디의 책은 우리의 접근 방식이 단지 잠재 상태로 존재하며 자극을 기다리는 생물학에 뿌리를 두고 있다고 말하는 하나의 완전한 학계를 나에게 소개했다.

흐르디 및 다른 전문가들을 인터뷰하고 관련 연구들을 자세히 살펴본 후, 나는 하나의 단순한 결론에 도달했다. 아버지가 되는 과정은 모성이 여성을 변화시키는 방식을 그대로 반영하여 남성을 변화시킨다. 아버지가 아기 돌봄에 더 많이 관여할수록 이러한 전환은 더욱 깊어진다. 우리 내분비 및 신경계에서 일어나는 이러한 변화는 양육하는 아버지가 현대의 일탈이 아니라 깊이 뿌리내린 생물학적 특성임을 보여준다.

하락하는 테스토스테론 아기들이 아빠의 신체를 어떻게 변화시키는지에 관한 가장 초기 연구는 다른 동물들에 대한 관찰에서 비롯되었다. 20세기 후반의 이 연구들은 다른 영장류를 포함한 많은 포유류 수컷이 적극적인 양육에 참여할 때 전형적으로 모성과 연관된 테스토스테론, 바소프레신, 프로락틴과 같은 호르몬의 증가 및 감소를 포함한 뚜렷한 호르몬 변화를 보인다는 것을 발견했다.

2000년대 초, 당시 대학원생이었던 미국 인류학자 리 게틀러(Lee Gettler)가 이러한 발견을 접했을 때, 그는 강한 흥미를 느꼈다. 현재 인디애나주 노트르담 대학교 호르몬, 건강 및 인간 행동 연구실의 소장인 게틀러는 "당시 강사에게 인간 아버지들을 대상으로 이러한 질문을 연구하는 사람이 있는지 물어봤는데, 당시의 대답은 대체로 '아니오'였다"고 말했다.

남성의 호르몬 변화를 입증한 최초의 연구는 캐서린 윈-에드워즈(Katherine Wynne-Edwards)와 앤 스토어(Anne Storey)라는 두 명의 캐나다 학자들에 의해 2000년에 막 출판되었다. 게틀러가 이 분야를 조사하기 시작했을 때, 자녀가 있는 남성이 자녀가 없는 남성보다 테스토스테론 수치가 낮다는 것은 이미 확립된 사실이었다.

게틀러는 나에게 이렇게 설명했다. "하지만 여기에는 닭이 먼저냐 알이 먼저냐 하는 문제가 있죠. 테스토스테론이 낮은 남성이 아버지가 될 가능성이 더 높은 걸까요? 아니면 아버지가 되는 과정이 남성의 일련의 생물학적 변화를 이끌어내는 걸까요?"

이 질문과 다른 질문들에 답하기 위해, 게틀러는 필리핀 세부시티에서 수십 년에 걸쳐 진행되는 프로젝트를 운영하는 과학자들과 팀을 이루었다. 2005년, 이 팀은 파트너가 없는 624명의 21세 평균 연령 남성으로부터 타액 샘플을 채취하여 테스토스테론을 검사한 후, 4년 뒤에 다시 검사를 진행했다.

그들은 두 가지 질문에 답하고자 했다. 그 기간 동안 아버지가 된 남성의 테스토스테론이 더 낮을 것인가? 그리고 육아에 더 많은 시간을 보낸 아버지일수록 그 수치가 더 낮을 것인가?

결과가 나왔을 때, 두 질문 모두에 대한 대답은 '그렇다'였다. 아이를 가진 남성은 비아버지군에 비해 테스토스테론 수치가 유의미하게 낮았다. 그리고 아이를 돌보는 데 더 오랜 시간을 보낸 남성일수록 테스토스테론의 감소 폭이 가장 컸다. 영아와 한 침대를 공유한 남성들 역시 수치가 더 낮았다. "나는 그것이..."

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Dad brains: How fatherhood rewires the male mind 15 hours ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Diego Arguedas Ortiz From before their babies are born, men undergo serious hormonal changes that can powerfully influence their behaviour – with consequences for their child&#x27;s wellbeing. In the months before my son was born, my partner and I attended an active birth workshop, a breastfeeding session and the hospital-run antenatal course, read a small pile of pregnancy and baby books and scrolled through loads of websites. Our notepads quickly filled up. Among my notes of that time are details of the many ways women&#x27;s bodies prepare for birth and motherhood: hormones rise and drop, organs move, brains reshape. No one, however, told me that my brain and body were also readying for fatherhood. My son was over a year old when I first came across that idea in Father Time , a book by primatologist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy in which she argues that men have all the necessary biological wiring to be "every bit as protective and nurturing as the most committed mother". This piqued my curiosity. I am a resolute believer in active fathering, but I had imagined this was a cultural decision by my generation of men. Hrdy&#x27;s book, however, introduced me to an entire academic field saying that our approach is rooted in biology, just dormant and waiting to be triggered. After interviewing Hrdy and other experts and delving into the studies, I came to a simple conclusion: fatherhood changes men in ways that echo how motherhood transforms women. The more involved a father is with their baby&#x27;s care, the deeper this transition becomes. These shifts in our endocrine and neural system show that the nurturing father is not a modern aberration, but a deeply rooted biological trait. Falling testosterone The earliest research on how fathers are physically changed by babies came from observations of other animals. These late 20th-Century studies found that many mammalian males – including other primates – show clear hormonal shifts , including rises and drops in hormones like testosterone, vasoprin and prolactin, typically associated with motherhood, as they engage in active parental care. When the American anthropologist Lee Gettler, then an undergrad student, heard about these findings in the early 2000s, he was hooked. "I asked [my lecturer] whether anyone was studying these questions in human fathers, and the answer at that point was largely no", says Gettler, now the director of the Hormones, Health, and Human Behavior Laboratory at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana. The first-ever study demonstrating hormonal changes in men had just been published in 2000 by two Canadian scholars – Katherine Wynne-Edwards and Anne Storey. By the time Gettler looked into this field, it was already an established fact that fathers had lower testosterone that men without kids. "But there&#x27;s a chicken and the egg problem there, right?" Gettler explained to me. "Are low testosterone men more likely to become fathers? Or does the transition to fatherhood kind of lead to this cascade of biological changes in men?" To answer this question and others, Gettler teamed up with the scientists running a decades-long project in Cebu City, Philippines. In 2005, this team collected saliva samples from 624 men, with an average age of 21 years old and without partners, and tested them for testosterone, then four years later tested them again. They wanted to answer two questions: would men that become fathers in the interim have lower testosterone, and would it be even lower in fathers that spent more hours doing childcare? When the results came back , the answer to both questions was "yes". The men that had babies showed significantly lower levels of testosterone compared to non-fathers. And the men that had spent longer looking after babies showed the largest drops in testosterone. Those that shared a bed with their infants also had lower levels. "I think it was the first clear message in the scientific literature that men have this capacity to prepare for fatherhood," Gettler told me. In a way, he explains, this is their biology preparing them for caregiving. Their findings are not unique. Other teams have also found that drops in testosterone during their partner&#x27;s pregnancy are also linked with higher investment, commitment and satisfaction after birth, and that this hormone’s level was even linked to the men&#x27;s reactions to baby cries : it made them more alert and responsive. In 2018, a team in Gettler&#x27;s lab also concluded that fathers with lower levels of testosterone tend to be more involved in caring for babies and toddlers. But when does this happen? The question of whether it&#x27;s before or after birth was bubbling in the mind of James K Rilling, the director of the Laboratory for Human Social Neuroscience at Emory University in the US. "My assumption," Rilling told me, "was that it would happen during the postnatal period after fathers spent some time interacting with their infants." The lower their testosterone, the more involved they become with the mother and infant postnatally – James Rilling What they found surprised them . When they tested expectant fathers only four months after conception, two hormones were already lower than in their control group: testosterone and vasopressin. "And what&#x27;s interesting is that the lower their testosterone, the more involved they become with the mother and infant postnatally," says Rilling, who in 2024 published Father Nature , a book exploring the science of fatherhood. He said vasopressin had a similar effect. Rilling is intrigued about why this happens. Is there a pheromonal cue that fathers-to-be get from their pregnant partners? Is it a psychological shift once they know they are expecting a baby? As with many surprising findings in this relatively young field, we do not know. What is certain is that the changes go beyond testosterone. A wave of the love hormone Take, for instance, oxytocin, the so-called love hormone . This is one hormone I recall from my prenatal courses: we were encouraged to keep things relaxed and smooth during labour so my partner&#x27;s oxytocin would flow and ease up the delivery. Once my son was born, we were told, a huge surge of oxytocin at birth and repeated boosts through breastfeeding would help him and my partner bond. But I wasn&#x27;t aware that in the first hours after his birth, as he napped on my naked chest, oxytocin was also rising in me. Many studies around the world have found higher oxytocin in fathers, including those with kids aged one to two years old and those interacting with babies under six months – and that seems to correspond to the amount of time spent with our kids. For instance, fathers that engaged in more playful games and contact with their children showed a rise in oxytocin, and a similar change was even evident when the fathers first held their newborns . Oxytocin supercharges our paternal instinct. You can test this, Rilling explains, by spraying men&#x27;s noses with the hormone and taking note of what happens. "There&#x27;s this one study I absolutely love, " he says. "They give [dads] intranasal oxytocin as they are interacting with their infant, and they find that it makes the fathers move their head around faster." In the videocall, Rilling jolts his head from left to right and up and down, in what looks like a very convincing overexcited dad. Such results suggest a positive self-reinforcing loop with oxytocin: as the hormone rises, a dad is more likely to engage with their child, which then triggers a further rise. The more scientists look into this topic, the more changes they find in other hormones too. In a study published in 2025, Rilling and his team found that vasopressin – a hormone that in animals is often involved in territoriality and male-male aggression – was suppressed in new fathers before their babies were born . Another surpris