London - A dummy may seem like an ideal way to soothe a crying baby, but a new study suggests this could stunt their emotional development.
Infants learn how to interact largely through mimicry and researchers found pacifiers interrupted this process in young boys as they stopped them from copying different facial expressions.
The team of psychologists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison found that heavy pacifier use was linked to poor results on various measures of emotional maturity.
The study is the first to associate pacifiers with psychological consequences.
The World Health Organisation and American Academy of Paediatrics already call for limiting pacifier use to promote breast-feeding and because of connections to ear infections or dental abnormalities.
People of all ages often mimic – unwittingly or otherwise – the expressions and body language of the people around them.
“By reflecting what another person is doing, you create some part of the feeling yourself,” said lead author Professor Paula Niedenthal. “That’s one of the ways we understand what someone is feeling – especially if they seem angry, but they’re saying they’re not; or they’re smiling, but the context isn’t right for happiness.”
Mimicry can be an important learning tool for babies.
“We can talk to infants, but at least initially they aren’t going to understand what the words mean,” Niedenthal says. “So, the way we communicate with infants at first is by using the tone of our voice and our facial expressions.”
With a pacifier in their mouth, a baby is less able to mirror those expressions and the emotions they represent.
The effect is similar to that seen in studies of patients receiving injections of Botox to paralyse facial muscles and reduce wrinkles. Botox users experience a narrower range of emotions and often have trouble identifying the emotions behind expressions on other faces.
“That work got us thinking about critical periods of emotional development, like infancy,” Niedenthal said.
“What if you always had something in your mouth that prevented you from mimicking and resonating with the facial expression of somebody?”
The researchers found six and seven-year-old boys who spent more time with pacifiers in their mouths as young children were less likely to mimic the emotional expressions of faces peering out from a video.
College-aged men who reported more pacifier use as children also scored lower than their peers on common tests of perspective-taking, a component of empathy.
A group of college students took a standard test of emotional intelligence measuring the way they make decisions based on assessing the moods of other people. Among the men in the group, heavier pacifier use went hand-in-hand with lower scores.
“What’s impressive about this is the incredible consistency across those three studies in the pattern of data,” Niedenthal said.
“There’s no effect of pacifier use on these outcomes for girls, and there’s a detriment for boys with length of pacifier use even outside anxiety or attachment issues that may affect emotional development.”
Girls develop earlier in many ways, according to Niedenthal, and it is possible that they make sufficient progress in emotional development before or despite pacifier use. It may be that boys are simply more vulnerable than girls, and disrupting their use of facial mimicry is just more detrimental for them.
“It could be that parents are inadvertently compensating for girls using the pacifier, because they want their girls to be emotionally sophisticated. Because that’s a girly thing,” Niedenthal says.
“Since girls are not expected to be unemotional, they’re stimulated in other ways. But because boys are desired to be unemotional, when you plug them up with a pacifier, you don’t do anything to compensate and help them learn about emotions.”
Suggesting such a simple and common act has lasting and serious consequences is far from popular.
“Parents hate to have this discussion,” Niedenthal says. “They take the results very personally. Now, these are suggestive results, and they should be taken seriously. But more work needs to be done.”
Working out why girls seem to be immune (or how they may compensate) is an important next step as is the impact of how often the pacifier used.
“Probably not all pacifier use is bad at all times, so how much is bad and when?” Niedenthal said.
“We already know from this work that nighttime pacifier use doesn’t make a difference, presumably because that isn’t a time when babies are observing and mimicking our facial expressions anyway. It’s not learning time.”
But even with more research planned to further explain the new results, Niedenthal is comfortable telling parents to consider occasionally pocketing the pacifier.
“I’d just be aware of inhibiting any of the body’s emotional representational systems,” Niedenthal said.
“Since a baby is not yet verbal – and so much is regulated by facial expression – at least you want parents to be aware of that using something like a pacifier limits their baby’s ability to understand and explore emotions. And boys appear to suffer from that limitation.”
The study was published in the journal Basic and Applied Social Psychology. -- Daily Mail