Maternal odor shapes rapid face categorization in the infant brain.

Dev Sci

Developmental Ethology and Cognitive Psychology group, Centre des Sciences du Goût et de l'Alimentation, Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, CNRS, Inra, AgroSup Dijon, Dijon, France.

Published: March 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The human brain learns to categorize visual stimuli, like faces, despite physical differences and this process is influenced by multisensory inputs, notably olfaction.
  • Infants can process and categorize facial signals more effectively in the presence of their mother's body odor, suggesting that olfactory cues enhance visual recognition.
  • The research supports the idea that multisensory experiences play a crucial role in the early development of perceptual categorization in infants, revealing insights into how they interact with their environment.

Article Abstract

To successfully interact with a rich and ambiguous visual environment, the human brain learns to differentiate visual stimuli and to produce the same response to subsets of these stimuli despite their physical difference. Although this visual categorization function is traditionally investigated from a unisensory perspective, its early development is inherently constrained by multisensory inputs. In particular, an early-maturing sensory system such as olfaction is ideally suited to support the immature visual system in infancy by providing stability and familiarity to a rapidly changing visual environment. Here, we test the hypothesis that rapid visual categorization of salient visual signals for the young infant brain, human faces, is shaped by another highly relevant human-related input from the olfactory system, the mother's body odor. We observe that a right-hemispheric neural signature of single-glance face categorization from natural images is significantly enhanced in the maternal versus a control odor context in individual 4-month-old infant brains. A lack of difference between odor conditions for the common brain response elicited by both face and non-face images rules out a mere enhancement of arousal or visual attention in the maternal odor context. These observations show that face-selective neural activity in infancy is mediated by the presence of a (maternal) body odor, providing strong support for multisensory inputs driving category acquisition in the developing human brain and having important implications for our understanding of human perceptual development.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/desc.12877DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

maternal odor
8
face categorization
8
infant brain
8
visual
8
visual environment
8
human brain
8
visual categorization
8
multisensory inputs
8
body odor
8
odor context
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!