| Literature DB >> 27138751 |
Masako Okamoto1,2, Mika Shirasu1,2, Rei Fujita1,2,3, Yukei Hirasawa1,2, Kazushige Touhara1,2.
Abstract
Parental caregiving is critical for the survival of our young and continuation of our species. In humans, visual and auditory signals from offspring have been shown to be potent facilitators of parenting. However, whether odors emitted by our young also influence human parenting remains unclear. To explore this, we conducted a series of questionnaire surveys targeting parents with children under 6 years old. First, we collected episodes on experiencing odors/sniffing various parts of a child's body (n = 507). The prevalence of experiencing events described in those episodes was examined in a separate survey (n = 384). Based on those results, the Child Odor in Parenting scale (COPs) was developed, and subsequently used in the main survey (n = 888). We found COPs to have adequate content validity, concurrent validity, and reliability. Responses to the COPs demonstrated that parents, especially mothers with infants, are aware of odors from their offspring, and actively seek them in daily child-rearing. The factor structure and content of the COPs items indicated that child odors have both affective and instrumental roles. Affective experiences induce loving feeling and affectionate sniffing, while instrumental experiences pertain to specific hygienic needs. The head was the most frequent source of affective experiences, and the child's bottom of instrumental. Each was experienced by more than 90% of the mothers with a child below 1 year of age. Affective experiences significantly declined as the child grew older, possibly associated with the decline of physical proximity between parents and child. This age-related decline was not prominent for instrumental experiences, except for the bottom, which significantly declined after 3 years of age. The present findings suggest that child odors play roles in human parenting, and that their nature and significance change during the course of a child's development.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27138751 PMCID: PMC4854394 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0154392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Steps undertaken to develop the Child Odor in Parenting scale (COPs).
All the respondents were derived from the target population. None of the respondents participated in the survey more than once.
Child Odor in Parenting scale (COPs).
| We are studying how parents perceive and use odors from young children in daily child care. Please share your experiences by answering the following questions. Since this survey concerns odors arising from children themselves, please try not to include scents originating from cosmetics, such as shampoo. | ||
| Did you experience the following events with your (youngest) child in the last month? Please mark most appropriate option: | ||
| Body parts | Item no. | Question items |
| Head | H01 | Sniffed child's head because I like the smell |
| H02 | Sniffed child's head because he/she is cute | |
| H03 | Sniffed child's head because it is soothing | |
| H04 | Sniffed child's head because it smells good | |
| H05 | Perceived odor from child's head and felt happy | |
| H06 | Perceived odor from child's head and became soothed | |
| H07 | Perceived odor from child's head and felt loving | |
| H08 | Sniffed child's head without a particular reason | |
| H09 | Perceived odor from child's head and thought it smelled good | |
| H10 | Sniffed child's head naturally while interacting with child | |
| H11 | Sniffed child's head because it was just in front of my nose | |
| H12 | Sniffed child's head out of curiosity | |
| H13 | Sniffed child's head to confirm it is not smelly | |
| H14 | Sniffed child's head to check that it is clean | |
| H15 | Perceived odor from child's head and thought "let me clean it" | |
| Forehead | F01 | Sniffed child's forehead naturally while interacting with child |
| F02 | Sniffed child's forehead because she/he is cute | |
| F03 | Sniffed child's forehead without a particular reason | |
| F04 | Sniffed child's forehead because it was just in front of my nose | |
| F05 | Sniffed child's forehead while kissing | |
| F06 | Perceived odor from child's forehead and became soothed | |
| F07 | Perceived odor from child's forehead and felt loving | |
| F08 | Perceived odor from child's forehead and thought it smells good | |
| Hands | HA1 | Perceived odor from child's hands and felt loving |
| HA2 | Perceived odor from child's hands and felt he/she is cute | |
| HA3 | Sniffed child's hands because they are cute | |
| HA4 | Sniffed child's hands naturally while interacting with child | |
| HA5 | Perceived odor from child's hands and thought "let me clean them" | |
| HA6 | Sniffed child's hands to confirm they were not smelly | |
| Mouth | M01 | Sniffed child's mouth naturally while interacting with child |
| M02 | Sniffed child's mouth because it was just in front of my nose | |
| M03 | Sniffed child's mouth because she/he is cute | |
| M04 | Perceived odor from child's mouth and felt loving | |
| M05 | Perceived odor from child's mouth and knew what he/she ate | |
| M06 | Perceived odor from child's mouth and thought "let me clean it" | |
| M07 | Sniffed child's mouth to confirm it is not smelly | |
| Neck | N01 | Perceived odor from child's neck and felt loving |
| N02 | Sniffed child's neck naturally while interacting with child | |
| N03 | Perceived odor from child's neck and thought "let me clean it" | |
| Bottom | B01 | Perceived odor from child's bottom and thought it is good that he/she had pooed/peed |
| B02 | Perceived odor from child's bottom and thought "let me clean it" | |
| B03 | Sniffed child's bottom to see whether he/she pooed/peed | |
| B04 | Perceived odor from child's bottom and found it smelly | |
| B05 | Sniffed child's bottom to confirm it is not smelly | |
When administered, items regarding "sniff" and "perceive" were separated to avoid confusion. Order of the items was randomized within and between the body parts. As used here, "head" refers to scalp and hair, according to the typical usage of the original word in Japanese. Illustration indicating each body part was also attached for respondents for clarification.
Fig 2Factor structure of the Child Odor in Parenting scale (COPs) (n = 888).
Abbreviated questionnaire items, standardized factor loadings, and correlation coefficients are presented for each body part. Item number corresponds to those shown in Table 1. Information on model fit for the selected models as well as for the alternative models is provided in S1 Table. Instrumental factors are shown in blue, and the Affective factors are in pink.
Measures used to examine concurrent validity of the Child Odor in Parenting scale (COPs).
| Measure | Description |
|---|---|
| Self-administered odor questionnaire (SAOQ)[ | A self-report measure of olfactory acuity developed in Japan. Shown to be associated with odor recognition threshold determined by clinically used olfactory test. (α = .92, items = 20) |
| Odor Awareness Scale (OAS) | Measure of person's tendency to notice, pay attention to, or attach importance to odors in the environment. The Japanese version has three subscales. Reduced version of each subscale were used; awareness of positive odors (OAS-positive, α = .69, items = 3), awareness of negative odors (OAS-negative, α = .92, items = 4), and being affected by negative odors (OAS-nega-affected, α = .76, items = 3). |
| Odors in Everyday Life Questionnaire (OELQ) | Two of its subscales were used: Sexual role of bodily odor scale (OELQ-body; attracted, aroused, and soothed by body odors, α = .79, items = 4) and Ecological Odor Sensitivity scale (OELQ-ecological; sensitive to, aware of, and attentive to odors in daily life, α = .83, items = 5). Developer of OELQ found that, using sensory evaluation test, scores for those subscales to positively correlate with affective, and cognitive responsiveness respectively[ |
| Child Care Questionnaire (CCQ) | CCQ is prepared based on Parental Responsibility Scale [ |
| Marlowe-Crowne Social desirability scale (MC-SDS) [ | Measure of social desirability bias, a tendency of respondents to answer questions in a manner that will be viewed favorably by others (α = .77, items = 22). |
* Japanese versions were created for those that were not available in Japanese (S1 Text). α, Cronbach's alpha; items, number of items. Numbers in brackets indicate reference number.
Correlation between scores for the Child Odor in Parenting scale (COPs) and related measures (n = 888).
| Head | Forehead | Mouth | Hands | Neck | Bottom | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Measure | Aff. | Inst. | Aff. | Aff. | Inst. | Aff. | Inst. | Aff. | Inst. | |||||||||
| Respondent characteristics | ||||||||||||||||||
| Olfaction-related scales | ||||||||||||||||||
| SAOQ | .25 | .19 | .27 | .24 | .25 | .24 | .20 | .27 | .19 | |||||||||
| OELQ_ecological | .35 | .23 | .28 | .25 | .21 | .29 | .23 | .28 | .21 | |||||||||
| OELQ_body | .34 | .19 | .31 | .25 | .20 | .30 | .22 | .31 | .20 | |||||||||
| OAS_positive | .41 | .28 | .32 | .27 | .27 | .31 | .25 | .31 | .26 | |||||||||
| OAS_negative | .25 | .21 | .26 | .21 | .19 | .25 | .23 | .24 | .19 | |||||||||
| OAS_nega_affected | .18 | .09 | .15 | .11 | .09 | .12 | .05 | .15 | .11 | |||||||||
| Parent-child relationship | ||||||||||||||||||
| CCQ | .33 | .21 | .23 | .27 | .24 | .28 | .27 | .21 | .33 | |||||||||
| Social desirability | ||||||||||||||||||
| MC-SDS | -.05 | -.05 | -.01 | -.05 | -.05 | .02 | -.06 | .00 | -.05 | |||||||||
| Demographics | ||||||||||||||||||
| Respondent age | -.19 | -.10 | -.16 | -.19 | -.10 | -.19 | -.14 | -.17 | -.24 | |||||||||
| Respondent sex | -.26 | -.18 | -.17 | -.23 | -.21 | -.21 | -.22 | -.13 | -.19 | |||||||||
| Household income | -.06 | -.05 | -.01 | -.03 | -.01 | -.05 | -.02 | -.06 | -.06 | |||||||||
| Child characteristics | ||||||||||||||||||
| Child age | -.22 | -.04 | -.24 | -.17 | .13 | -.18 | -.07 | -.20 | -.41 | |||||||||
| Child sex | .01 | .06 | -.01 | .03 | .07 | .01 | .03 | .02 | .05 | |||||||||
| Child's current diet | ||||||||||||||||||
| Weaning status | -.17 | .00 | -.21 | -.12 | .15 | -.14 | -.05 | -.16 | -.29 | |||||||||
| Breast milk | .15 | -.01 | .18 | .14 | -.13 | .16 | .07 | .17 | .28 | |||||||||
Spearman's correlation coefficients are shown. Dummy code for Sex, 0 = female, 1 = male. Weaning status is coded as 1 = pre-weaning (milk only), 2 = weaning (milk and solids), 3 = weaned (solids only). Breast milk, 0 = currently not taking breast milk, 1 = currently taking breast milk regardless of whether solid food is started or not.
*p < .05.
**p < .001.
***p < .0001.
See Table 2 for abbreviation and S3 and S4 Tables for descriptive statistics.
Fig 3Cumulative bar chart showing differences in scores for the Child Odor in Parenting (COPs) subscales across child age groups.
Scores on the COPs subscales are summarized for six demographic groups (i.e., parents’ sex and child age groups; total n = 888). Scores for subscales comprised of the Instrumental factor are shown in blue, and for the Affective factor in pink. Scores for subscales were calculated by averaging 5-point rating scores across items (0, no expreience; 4, everyday, see Table 1 for detail). The Kruskal–Wallis test followed by a pair-wise Mann-Whitney test with Bonferroni correction was used to examine differences among child-age groups within each sex (father/mother). *p < .05. **p < .01. ***p < .001. Comparisons between sex and body parts are shown in S1 and S2 Figs.
Final models predicting Bottom and Head-affective scores obtained by stepwise regression analysis (n = 888).
| Independent variables | Bottom Inst. | Head Aff. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Child age | -.42 | -.16 | ||
| OAS_positive | .17 | .25 | ||
| OELQ_body | - | .17 | ||
| CCQ | .24 | .25 | ||
| Adjusted | .32 | .27 | ||
Standardized beta coefficients are shown.
***p < .0001.
Abbreviations are the same as Table 2.