How Does Paternal Odor Influence Perception of Fearful and Happy Faces in Infancy?
Antonia Düfeld, Sarah Jessen

TL;DR
This study shows that a father's smell can influence how 7-month-old infants process male faces, especially when they are fearful.
Contribution
The study provides first evidence that paternal odor influences emotional face processing in infants, specifically for male faces.
Findings
Infants showed enhanced EEG responses to fearful male faces when smelling their father's odor.
Emotion processing at the occipital N290 was not affected by paternal odor.
The effects were specific to male faces, indicating a gender-specific impact of social odor.
Abstract
Social odor plays an important role for various facets of early development, including communication and social processing. Previous research focusing on maternal odor has shown that smelling the mother can influence face processing in general as well as emotion processing more specifically. However, it is unclear to what extent these effects are specific to maternal odor or can also be found for other familiar social odors. To address this question, we investigated the impact of the father's odor on emotional face processing in 7‐month‐old infants (age at appointment 1: 209 ± 6 days [mean ± SD], range: 199–225 days; age at appointment 2: 217 ± 6 days, range: 206–231 days; gender: 15 girls and 15 boys). We recorded the infant's EEG response to female and male happy and fearful faces while infants were exposed to either their father's odor or the odor of a different infant's father.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOlfactory and Sensory Function Studies · Face Recognition and Perception · Body Image and Dysmorphia Studies
