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Babies Identify Close Relationships by Saliva, Study Suggests
UPI ^ | JAN. 21, 2022

Posted on 01/23/2022 12:27:03 AM PST by nickcarraway

Researchers said saliva sharing helps babies identify the people who are most likely to look after their needs. Photo by collusor/Pixabay Sharing food and smooching are two ways babies can suss out whom they can depend on to take care for them, a new study suggests.

The tell-tale clue common to both is a surprising one: saliva.

"Babies don't know in advance which relationships are the close and morally obligating ones, so they have to have some way of learning this by looking at what happens around them," said senior study author Rebecca Saxe, of the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

For the study, her team observed babies and toddlers as they watched staged interactions between people and puppets. The babies were 8-1/2 to 10 months of age and the toddlers were 16-1/2 to 18-1/2 months old.

In one set of experiments, a puppet shared an orange with one actor, then tossed a ball back and forth with another actor.

After the little ones watched these interactions, researchers watched their reactions when the puppet showed distress while sitting between the two actors.

Based on results of animal studies, they expected the youngsters would look first at the person they expected to help.

Not so. Researchers found the children were more likely to look toward the actor who shared food with the puppet, not the one who shared a toy.

In the second set of experiments, which focused on saliva, the actor either placed her finger in her mouth and then into the mouth of the puppet, or placed her finger on her forehead and then, on the puppet's. When the actor later expressed distress while standing between the puppets, children were more likely to look toward the puppet with whom she had shared saliva.

The findings suggest that saliva sharing helps infants learn about social relationships, researchers said. It helps babies identify the people who are most likely to look after their needs.

"The general skill of learning about social relationships is very useful," said lead author Ashley Thomas, a postdoctoral student at MIT. "One reason why this distinction between thick and thin [relationships] might be important for infants in particular, especially human infants, who depend on adults for longer than many other species, is that it might be a good way to figure out who else can provide the support that they depend on to survive."

Researchers plan similar studies with infants in cultures that have different family structures. They also want to use brain imaging to investigate what parts of the adult brain are involved in making saliva-based assessments about social relationships.

The findings were published Thursday in the journal Science.


TOPICS: Science
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1 posted on 01/23/2022 12:27:03 AM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
One reason that I'm still not very popular at cocktail parties.

Regards,

2 posted on 01/23/2022 12:29:23 AM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: nickcarraway

Children have an oral fixation? Quick, call Sigmund Freud.


3 posted on 01/23/2022 12:36:19 AM PST by gundog ( It was a bright cold day in April, though and the clocks were striking thirteen. )
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To: nickcarraway

thanks for sharing.

“....The babies were 8-1/2 to 10 months of age and the toddlers were 16-1/2 to 18-1/2 months old.

.....The findings suggest that saliva sharing helps infants learn about social relationships, researchers said. It helps babies identify the people who are most likely to look after their needs. .....”

Kind of makes you wonder about all those scenes of newborn calves, kittens, etc. being licked by their mother and if the action is much significant than just cleaning the newborn.


4 posted on 01/23/2022 12:47:16 AM PST by Robert357
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To: nickcarraway

In other words, do not give food to puppets in the presence of babies if you do not want saliva on your clothes.


5 posted on 01/23/2022 3:38:34 AM PST by ConservativeMind (Trump: Befuddling Democrats, Republicans, and the Media for the benefit of the US and all mankind.)
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To: nickcarraway

Sharing saliva, eh?

In that case, me and Little Dood (my Gkiddo) are as tight as can be...he soaks my shirt every time I burp his chunky little self...


6 posted on 01/23/2022 7:30:34 AM PST by ASOC (This space for rent)
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To: nickcarraway

I fail to see where saliva was the trigger for the response. In one test, babies favored the offer of food over a toy, and in the other, the mouth over the forehead. The importance of the oral stage of development is already long established. Not only that; it’s common sense that a baby would favor food, eating, or putting their mouth on something in their ultra-dependant infancy.

The article did not mention saliva other than as a way of trying to break new article-publishing ground without bothering to have the infants smell, taste or even feel any saliva, even their mother’s saliva versus a more distant relative’s or a stranger’s.

Sheesh.


7 posted on 01/24/2022 10:34:12 AM PST by Albion Wilde (If science can’t be questioned, it’s not science anymore, it’s propaganda. --Aaron Rodgers)
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