Pacifiers may have emotional consequences for boys
Pacifiers may stunt the emotional development of baby boys by robbing them of the opportunity to try on facial expressions during infancy. Three experiments by a team of researchers led by psychologists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison tie heavy pacifier use as a young child to poor results on various measures of emotional maturity. Reasearch ties heavy pacifier use by boys to poor results on various measures of emotional maturity. The study, published today by the journal "Basic and Applied Social Psychology," is the first to associate pacifiers with psychological consequences. The World Health Organization and American Academy of Pediatrics already call for limiting pacifier use to promote breast-feeding and because of connections to ear infections or dental abnormalities. Humans 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," says Paula Niedenthal , UW-Madison psychology professor and lead author of the study.
