4.4 Article

Newborn crawling and rooting in response to maternal breast odor

期刊

DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE
卷 24, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/desc.13061

关键词

locomotion; newborn; olfaction; perception‐ action coupling; rooting

资金

  1. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-11-BSH2-007 01]
  2. Fondation de France [2014 00052248]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Research shows that perception and action are already tightly linked in newborns, with olfactory stimuli from the mother affecting crawling and rooting movements. Newborns display more efficient crawling and increased head movements in response to maternal odors, indicating adaptability to olfactory information and differentiated coupling between olfaction and locomotion and rooting systems.
A growing literature shows that perception and action are already tightly coupled in the newborn. The current study aimed to examine the nature of the coupling between olfactory stimuli from the mother and the newborn's crawling and rooting (exploratory movements of the head). To examine the coupling, the crawling and rooting behavior of 28 2-day-old newborns were studied while they were supported prone on a mobility device shaped like a mini skateboard, the Crawliskate (R), their head positioned directly on top of a pad infused with either their mother's breast odor (Maternal) or the odor of water (Control). Video and 3D kinematic analyses of the number and types of limb movements and quantification of displacement across the surface revealed that newborns are significantly more efficient crawlers when they smell the maternal odor, moving greater distances although performing fewer locomotor movements. In addition, the newborns made significantly more head rooting movements in the presence of the maternal odor. These findings suggest that the circuitry underlying quadrupedal locomotion and exploratory movements of the head is already adaptable to olfactory information via higher brain processing. Moreover, the coupling between olfaction and the two action systems, locomotion and rooting, is already differentiated. As crawling enables the newborn to move toward the mother's breast immediately after birth and facilitates mother-infant interaction, the results of this study highlight the potential value of using maternal odors to stimulate mobility in infants at risk of motor delay and/or deprived of this odor when born prematurely.

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