“…Fetal and neonatal sensory discrimination capabilities have been described in different altricial species (rabbits, sheep, rats) including humans (Lecanuet et al, 1995;Schaal et al, 2002Schaal et al, , 2004Clark-Gambelunghe and Clark, 2015;Fulgione et al, 2017). Neuroethological studies indicate that chemosensory systems rapidly become functional in the uterus (Molina et al, 1999(Molina et al, , 2007aSchaal et al, 2004;Bloomfield et al, 2017). This development is required for essential survival purposes related to subsequent maternal attachment processes including the discrimination and recognition of the main nutrients (colostrum and milk) that will be provided both peri-and neonatally (Cernoch and Porter, 1985;Makin and Porter, 1989;Marlier et al, 1998;Miller and Spear, 2009;Díaz-Marte et al, 2010;Corona and Lévy, 2015).…”