Henry Séverine, Richard-Yris Marie-Annick, Tordjman Sylvie, Hausberger Martine
UMR CNRS 6552 Ethos, Ethologie animale et humaine, Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France.
PLoS One. 2009;4(4):e5216. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0005216. Epub 2009 Apr 8.
The neonatal period in humans and in most mammals is characterized by intense mother-young interactions favoring pair bonding and the adaptation of neonates to their new environment. However, in many post-delivery procedures, human babies commonly experience combined maternal separation and intense handling for about one hour post-birth. Currently, the effects of such disturbances on later attachment and on the development of newborns are still debated: clearly, further investigations are required. As animals present good models for controlled experimentation, we chose domestic horses to investigate this issue. Horses, like humans, are characterized by single births, long lactating periods and selective mother-infant bonds. Routine postnatal procedures for foals, as for human babies, also involve intense handling and maternal separation. In the present study, we monitored the behavior of foals from early stages of development to "adolescence", in a normal ecological context (social groups with adults and peers). Experimental foals, separated from their mothers and handled for only 1 hour post-birth, were compared to control foals, left undisturbed after birth. Our results revealed short- and long-term effects of this unique neonatal experience on attachment and subsequent social competences. Thus, experimental foals presented patterns of insecure attachment to their mothers (strong dependence on their mothers, little play) and impaired social competences (social withdrawal, aggressiveness) at all ages. We discuss these results in terms of mother-young interactions, timing of interactions and relationships between bonding and subsequent social competences. Our results indicate that this ungulate species could become an interesting animal model. To our knowledge, this is the first clear demonstration that intervention just after birth affects bonding and subsequent social competences (at least until "adolescence"). It opens new research directions for studies on both humans and other animals.
在人类和大多数哺乳动物中,新生儿期的特点是母婴之间有强烈的互动,这有利于建立亲子关系,并使新生儿适应新环境。然而,在许多分娩后的程序中,人类婴儿通常在出生后约一小时内经历母婴分离和高强度护理。目前,这种干扰对后期依恋和新生儿发育的影响仍存在争议:显然,需要进一步研究。由于动物是进行对照实验的良好模型,我们选择家养马对此问题进行研究。马与人类一样,具有单胎出生、哺乳期长和母婴选择性依恋的特点。与人类婴儿一样,马驹的常规产后程序也包括高强度护理和母婴分离。在本研究中,我们在正常生态环境(与成年马和同龄马组成的社会群体)中监测了马驹从发育早期到“青春期”的行为。将出生后仅与母亲分离并接受1小时护理的实验马驹与出生后未受干扰的对照马驹进行比较。我们的结果揭示了这种独特的新生儿经历对依恋和后续社交能力的短期和长期影响。因此,实验马驹在各个年龄段都表现出对母亲不安全的依恋模式(强烈依赖母亲,很少玩耍)和社交能力受损(社交退缩、攻击性)。我们从母婴互动、互动时间以及依恋与后续社交能力之间的关系等方面讨论了这些结果。我们的结果表明,这种有蹄类动物可能成为一个有趣的动物模型。据我们所知,这是首次明确证明出生后立即进行的干预会影响依恋和后续社交能力(至少直到“青春期”)。它为人类和其他动物的研究开辟了新的研究方向。