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Olfactory classical conditioning in neonates.

R M Sullivan1, S Taborsky-Barba, R Mendoza

  • 1Department of Pediatrics, University of California, Irvine.

Pediatrics
|April 1, 1991
PubMed
Summary
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Newborn infants demonstrate associative learning in their olfactory system. This study shows one-day-old babies can form odor-based associations, suggesting complex learning capabilities shortly after birth.

Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Olfactory Learning

Background:

  • Newborns possess a developing olfactory system.
  • Understanding early associative learning is crucial for developmental research.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate olfactory associative learning in one-day-old infants.
  • To assess the capacity for classical conditioning in the neonatal olfactory system.

Main Methods:

  • A classical conditioning procedure pairing a citrus odor (conditioned stimulus) with tactile stroking (unconditioned stimulus).
  • Control groups received only odor, only stroking, or reversed pairings.
  • Conditioned responding (head turning) was assessed the following day in awake and sleeping infants.

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Main Results:

  • Infants exposed to forward odor-stroking pairings showed conditioned head turning towards the odor.
  • Conditioned responses occurred regardless of infant state (awake or asleep).
  • The learned response was odor-specific, not elicited by a novel floral odor.

Conclusions:

  • Newborns exhibit complex associative olfactory learning within 48 hours of birth.
  • These findings establish baseline data for studying olfactory learning in at-risk neonates.