Children's responses to odors provide us with a window into their emotions, says study lead author Julie Mennella, PhD, a Monell biopsychologist.
Researchers from the Monell Chemical Senses Center have found that how children respond to the smell of alcoholic beverages is related to their mothers’ reasons for drinking.
When asked to choose between the odor of beer and an unpleasant odor, children of mothers classified as ’Escape drinkers’ were more likely than children of Non-escape drinkers to choose the unpleasant odor, the study found."Children’s responses to odors provide us with a window into their emotions," says study lead author Julie Mennella, PhD, a Monell biopsychologist.
"When given a choice between beer and pyridine - the smell of rotten eggs - children of mothers who drink to relieve tension and worry choose pyridine as smelling better. That’s pretty powerful."
In the study, 145 children between the ages of 5 and 8 years were presented with seven pairs of odors. One of the odors was always beer; the others were bubblegum, chocolate, cola, coffee, green tea, pyridine, and cigarette smoke. For each pair, the children indicated which odor they liked better.
Mennella notes that because odor information travels directly to areas of the brain that deal with non-verbal aspects of emotion and memory, studying children’s responses to odors provides insights into their emotional worlds.
"Like adults, children are not very good at identifying odors. However, they are good at telling us whether they like an odor or not. This study shows that whether they like the odor of beer depends not just on how often their mother drinks, but on why she drinks," Mennella says.
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Mothers’ reasons for drinking influenced how children responded to the odor of beer. Relative to children of Non-escape drinkers, children whose mothers were Escape drinkers showed greater dislike for the odor of beer, even when beer was compared with unpleasant odors such as pyridine and cigarette smoke.
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These children also experienced alcohol in a different emotional context, as the questionnaires revealed that their mothers were more tense and more likely to worry and feel guilty about their drinking.
"Even before their first taste, young children are learning about alcohol and about why their parents drink. They do this by seeing people drink and hearing them talk about it," says Mennella.
"Our findings show that children are also processing the smell of alcohol with the emotional reasons their mothers, and perhaps fathers, drink."
Mennella comments that additional research is needed to determine whether children who dislike the odor of alcohol and experience it in a negative emotional context are more or less likely as adolescents or adults to seek out alcohol when stressed.
The study appears in the journal Alcohol.
Source-ANI
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