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Child Odors and Parenting: A Survey Examination of the Role of Odor in Child-Rearing

Parental caregiving is critical for the survival of our young and continuation of our species. In humans, visual and auditory signals from offspring have been shown to be potent facilitators of parenting. However, whether odors emitted by our young also influence human parenting remains unclear. To...

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Autores principales: Okamoto, Masako, Shirasu, Mika, Fujita, Rei, Hirasawa, Yukei, Touhara, Kazushige
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4854394/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27138751
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0154392
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author Okamoto, Masako
Shirasu, Mika
Fujita, Rei
Hirasawa, Yukei
Touhara, Kazushige
author_facet Okamoto, Masako
Shirasu, Mika
Fujita, Rei
Hirasawa, Yukei
Touhara, Kazushige
author_sort Okamoto, Masako
collection PubMed
description Parental caregiving is critical for the survival of our young and continuation of our species. In humans, visual and auditory signals from offspring have been shown to be potent facilitators of parenting. However, whether odors emitted by our young also influence human parenting remains unclear. To explore this, we conducted a series of questionnaire surveys targeting parents with children under 6 years old. First, we collected episodes on experiencing odors/sniffing various parts of a child’s body (n = 507). The prevalence of experiencing events described in those episodes was examined in a separate survey (n = 384). Based on those results, the Child Odor in Parenting scale (COPs) was developed, and subsequently used in the main survey (n = 888). We found COPs to have adequate content validity, concurrent validity, and reliability. Responses to the COPs demonstrated that parents, especially mothers with infants, are aware of odors from their offspring, and actively seek them in daily child-rearing. The factor structure and content of the COPs items indicated that child odors have both affective and instrumental roles. Affective experiences induce loving feeling and affectionate sniffing, while instrumental experiences pertain to specific hygienic needs. The head was the most frequent source of affective experiences, and the child’s bottom of instrumental. Each was experienced by more than 90% of the mothers with a child below 1 year of age. Affective experiences significantly declined as the child grew older, possibly associated with the decline of physical proximity between parents and child. This age-related decline was not prominent for instrumental experiences, except for the bottom, which significantly declined after 3 years of age. The present findings suggest that child odors play roles in human parenting, and that their nature and significance change during the course of a child’s development.
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spelling pubmed-48543942016-05-07 Child Odors and Parenting: A Survey Examination of the Role of Odor in Child-Rearing Okamoto, Masako Shirasu, Mika Fujita, Rei Hirasawa, Yukei Touhara, Kazushige PLoS One Research Article Parental caregiving is critical for the survival of our young and continuation of our species. In humans, visual and auditory signals from offspring have been shown to be potent facilitators of parenting. However, whether odors emitted by our young also influence human parenting remains unclear. To explore this, we conducted a series of questionnaire surveys targeting parents with children under 6 years old. First, we collected episodes on experiencing odors/sniffing various parts of a child’s body (n = 507). The prevalence of experiencing events described in those episodes was examined in a separate survey (n = 384). Based on those results, the Child Odor in Parenting scale (COPs) was developed, and subsequently used in the main survey (n = 888). We found COPs to have adequate content validity, concurrent validity, and reliability. Responses to the COPs demonstrated that parents, especially mothers with infants, are aware of odors from their offspring, and actively seek them in daily child-rearing. The factor structure and content of the COPs items indicated that child odors have both affective and instrumental roles. Affective experiences induce loving feeling and affectionate sniffing, while instrumental experiences pertain to specific hygienic needs. The head was the most frequent source of affective experiences, and the child’s bottom of instrumental. Each was experienced by more than 90% of the mothers with a child below 1 year of age. Affective experiences significantly declined as the child grew older, possibly associated with the decline of physical proximity between parents and child. This age-related decline was not prominent for instrumental experiences, except for the bottom, which significantly declined after 3 years of age. The present findings suggest that child odors play roles in human parenting, and that their nature and significance change during the course of a child’s development. Public Library of Science 2016-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4854394/ /pubmed/27138751 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0154392 Text en © 2016 Okamoto et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Okamoto, Masako
Shirasu, Mika
Fujita, Rei
Hirasawa, Yukei
Touhara, Kazushige
Child Odors and Parenting: A Survey Examination of the Role of Odor in Child-Rearing
title Child Odors and Parenting: A Survey Examination of the Role of Odor in Child-Rearing
title_full Child Odors and Parenting: A Survey Examination of the Role of Odor in Child-Rearing
title_fullStr Child Odors and Parenting: A Survey Examination of the Role of Odor in Child-Rearing
title_full_unstemmed Child Odors and Parenting: A Survey Examination of the Role of Odor in Child-Rearing
title_short Child Odors and Parenting: A Survey Examination of the Role of Odor in Child-Rearing
title_sort child odors and parenting: a survey examination of the role of odor in child-rearing
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4854394/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27138751
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0154392
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