“…During feeding, infants use suction to acquire milk, and then move their tongue in a wave posteriorly to transport it to the valleculae (Elad et al, 2014; German et al, 1992). Tongue movements and suction generation during this process have been demonstrated to respond to sensory feedback (Mayerl et al, 2020), and infants use different neuromotor patterns and suction generation capacities depending on nipple properties and milk flow (Inoue, Sakashita, & Kamegai, 1995; Moral et al, 2010). After milk arrives in the valleculae, a swallow is triggered by sensory fibers associated with the internal superior laryngeal nerve (SLN) when a threshold volume is attained (Ding et al, 2013; Lang, Medda, Babaei, & Shaker, 2014), and the resulting swallow is thought to be primarily reflexive (Miller, 2008).…”