A loving touch, characterized by a slow caress or stroke - often
an instinctive gesture from a mother to a child or between partners in
romantic relationships - may increase the brain's ability to construct a
sense of body ownership and, in turn, play a part in creating and
sustaining a healthy sense of self. These findings come from a new study
published online in Frontiers of Psychology, led by
Neuropsychoanalysis Centre Director Dr. Aikaterini (Katerina)
Fotopoulou, University College London, and NPSA grantee Dr. Paul Mark
Jenkinson of the Department of Psychology, University of Hertfordshire
in the UK.The study, of 52 healthy adults, used a common experimental
technique known as the rubber hand illusion, in which participants'
brains are tricked into believing that a strategically placed rubber
hand is their own. As they watch the rubber hand being stroked in
synchrony with their own, they begin to think that the fake hand belongs
to them. This technique demonstrates the changeable nature of the
brain's perception of the body. Affective touch, characterised by slow speed tactile stimulation of the
skin (between 1 and 10cm per second) has been previously correlated with
pleasant emotion and has also been seen to improve symptoms of anxiety
and other emotional symptoms in certain groups of adults and infants.
Dr. Fotopoulou's team wanted to test whether affective touch would
affect the brain's understanding of the body and body ownership. The team adapted the 'rubber hand' technique to incorporate four
different types of touch, including a synchronized and asynchronized,
slow, affective touch and a faster neutral touch, again in synchronous
and asynchronous patterns. Participants were also asked to complete a
standardized 'embodiment' questionnaire, to measure their subjective
experience during the experiment. The results confirmed previous findings that slow, light touch is
perceived as being more pleasant than fast touch. More importantly, the
study demonstrated that slow tactile stimulation made participants more
likely to believe that the rubber hand was their own, compared with the
faster neutral touch. The perception of affective touch in the brain is one of a number of
interoceptive signals that help us monitor homeostasis. This study
provides new evidence to support the existing idea that interoceptive
signals, such as affective touch, play an important role in how the
brain learns to construct a mental picture and an understanding of the
body, which ultimately helps to create a coherent sense of self. Decreased sensitivity to and awareness of interoceptive signals, such as
affective touch, have been linked to body image problems, unexplained
pain, anorexia nervosa and bulimia. "As affective touch is typically received from a loved one, these
findings further highlight how close relationships involve behaviors
that may play a crucial role in the construction of a sense of self,"
said Laura Crucianelli, the researcher who carried out the study. "The next step for our team," concluded Dr. Katerina Fotopoulou, "is to
examine whether being deprived of social signals, such as affective
touch from a parent during early development, may also lead to
abnormalities in the formation of a healthy body image and a healthy
sense of self, for example in patients with eating disorders such as
anorexia nervosa." Boosting interoceptive awareness and an individual's sense of body
ownership could be key to developing future treatments for some of these
conditions, and the sensation of 'affective touch' could play an
important role.
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