Hym Charlotte, Dumuids Marie-Victorine, Anderson David I, Forma Vincent, Provasi Joëlle, Brière-Dollat Camille, Granjon Lionel, Gervain Judit, Nazzi Thierry, Barbu-Roth Marianne
Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, CNRS - Université de Paris, Paris, France.
Marian Wright Edelman Institute, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, California, USA.
Dev Sci. 2023 Jan;26(1):e13248. doi: 10.1111/desc.13248. Epub 2022 Mar 15.
Human newborns can propel themselves to their mother's breast when positioned skin to skin on her abdomen just after birth. For decades, researchers have considered this primitive crawling behavior a spinal reflex, immune to supra spinal control. However, recent research suggests that neonatal crawling is already responsive to visual and olfactory stimuli processed at a supra spinal level. Here we report that a few hours post birth, French newborns can also modulate their crawling in response to their native language - a source of information that is processed supra-spinally. The crawling patterns of 23 French-born newborns were recorded on video and via an infrared motion capture system during two randomly ordered 2-min trials. The newborns were secured on a mini skateboard to facilitate arm and leg movements during their crawling propulsion. They heard a repetitive sequence of the same sentences either in French, their native language, or in English, a rhythmically different and hence discriminable unfamiliar language, on each trial. In French, compared to English, crawling was enhanced, with significantly more arm and leg steps and significantly more and larger trunk rotations in the cephalo-caudal axis. Moreover, newborns rotated their heads and trunk toward the appropriate loud speaker when hearing French but not English. These preliminary findings suggest that newborn crawling is not a simple stereotyped reflex under spinal control, but a complex pattern that can be modulated in response to higher-order, supra-spinally processed stimuli. The findings open fascinating questions about the range of stimuli to which newborn crawling is responsive.
人类新生儿在出生后立即与母亲腹部皮肤对皮肤接触时,能够自行向母亲的乳房移动。几十年来,研究人员一直认为这种原始的爬行行为是一种脊髓反射,不受脊髓以上的控制。然而,最近的研究表明,新生儿的爬行已经对在脊髓以上水平处理的视觉和嗅觉刺激有反应。在此我们报告,出生后几个小时,法国新生儿也能够根据他们的母语来调节他们的爬行,母语是一种在脊髓以上水平处理的信息来源。在两次随机排序的2分钟试验中,通过视频和红外运动捕捉系统记录了23名法国出生的新生儿的爬行模式。新生儿被固定在一个迷你滑板上,以便在爬行推进过程中便于手臂和腿部运动。在每次试验中,他们听到用他们的母语法语或用英语重复的相同句子序列,英语是一种节奏不同因而可区分的陌生语言。与听英语相比,听法语时新生儿的爬行得到增强,手臂和腿部的动作明显更多,头-尾轴上的躯干旋转明显更多且更大。此外,新生儿在听到法语而不是英语时,会将他们的头和躯干转向相应的扬声器。这些初步发现表明,新生儿的爬行不是脊髓控制下简单的刻板反射,而是一种复杂的模式,可以根据脊髓以上处理的高阶刺激进行调节。这些发现引发了关于新生儿爬行对何种刺激有反应的一系列有趣问题。