Search results for "Mother-infant relation"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
An overlooked aspect of the human breast: areolar glands in relation with breastfeeding pattern, neonatal weight gain, and the dynamics of lactation.
2012
WOS: 000301474900013; International audience; The early nursing-sucking relationship is not to be taken for granted in humans. A number of factors can either facilitate or mitigate its optimal establishment on the mother's or newborn's sides. Among these factors, a morphological feature of human mothers' breasts--the areolar glands (AG)--has been identified as potentially important. Three day-old infants display attraction during the presentation of the native secretions of the AG, suggesting that they could influence the newborn's behaviour during breastfeeding. The present study assessed this topic in a sample of 121 Caucasian mother-infant dyads. The areolae of these women were screened …
Do Brincar do Bebê ao Brincar da Criança: Um Estudo sobre o Processo de Subjetivação da Criança Autista
2018
RESUMO O brincar primitivo do bebê poderia nos revelar traços precoces de uma provável organização autística em curso na criança pequena? Em que medida o investimento do bebê face aos objetos do mundo externo e do ambiente poderia ser associado a suas primeiras experiências com o objeto materno? Tais questões são levantadas neste artigo, cujo principal objetivo é abordar o processo de subjetivação da criança autista a partir da correlação entre o brincar primitivo do bebê e o brincar simbólico da criança. Por meio de um estudo longitudinal de bebês com risco de autismo, constatou-se que, desde uma idade precoce, é possível detectar particularidades na maneira como eles investem e interagem …
Mammary olfactory signalisation in females and odor processing in neonates: ways evolved by rabbits and humans
2009
International audience; Mammalian females have long been known to release olfactory attraction in their offspring. Mammary odor cues control infant state, attention and directional responses, delay distress responses, stimulate breathing and positive oral actions, and finally can boost learning. Here, we survey female-offspring odor communication in two mammalian species - European rabbits and humans - taken as representatives of evolutionary extremes in terms of structure and dynamics of mother-infant relations, and level of neonatal autonomy. Despite these early psychobiological differences, females in both species have evolved mammary structures combining multiple sources of endogenous a…