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Bottle-fed neonates prefer an odor experienced in utero to an odor experienced postnatally in the feeding context
84
Citations
48
References
1998
Year
Cognitive ScienceNeonatologyFeeding ContextLactationBehavioral NeuroscienceHead-orientation ResponseAf OdorInfant NutritionMedicinePediatricsMaternal HealthBreastfeedingSensometricsElectronic NoseInfant CognitionBottle-fed NeonatesSocial SciencesFm Odor
The head-orientation response of 2- and 4-day-old bottle-feeding neonates was studied in paired-choice odor tests. Three tests were conducted at Days 2 and 4 after birth to assess the development of the relative response between two salient odors from the prenatal and postnatal environments: (a) amniotic fluid (AF) versus formula milk (FM), (b) FM versus control stimulus (distilled water), and (c) AF versus control stimulus. At both ages, AF and FM elicited positive orientation when presented simultaneously with the control stimulus, indicating that both odors were detectable and attractive to the infants. However, when AF and FM were presented concurrently, the infants expressed significantly longer orientation response toward AF odor than toward FM odor at the age of 2 and 4 days. Within the first 4 days of life, bottle-feeders thus display olfactory preference for a prenatal substrate over a postnatal substrate to which they were recurrently exposed in the feeding situation.
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