<P><B>Abstract</B></P> <P>The discovery that pleasant touch is coded by C-tactile fibers has generated considerable research interest and increased understanding of the skin as a channel for social information via cutane...
http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
다국어 초록 (Multilingual Abstract)
<P><B>Abstract</B></P> <P>The discovery that pleasant touch is coded by C-tactile fibers has generated considerable research interest and increased understanding of the skin as a channel for social information via cutane...
<P><B>Abstract</B></P> <P>The discovery that pleasant touch is coded by C-tactile fibers has generated considerable research interest and increased understanding of the skin as a channel for social information via cutaneous senses. However, no study has differentiated between the pleasant response to visual and tactile non-human stimulations. Our study investigated pleasant touch in which the visual and haptic touch information was obtained from an affective, but non-social experience, by a custom-built non-human device. Participants (n=19) received soft brush strokes on their lower left arm delivered by a rotary tactile stimulator (physical session) or watched a video of an arm being stroked by a rotary tactile stimulator (visual session). The brush strokes were delivered at the same velocities (0.3, 1, 3, 10, 30cm/s) and force (0.4N) in both sessions. After each trial, participants rated the pleasantness of the touch. Analysis of variance was used to assess the effects of velocity and modality (visual touch vs. physical touch) on the pleasantness rating. Participants rated strokes between 1 and 10cm/s as most pleasant under both conditions. The pleasantness rating patterns differed significantly among velocities; however, no significant differences were found between modalities. Visual and physical (without human-to-human interaction) touch elicited similar behavioral responses, including an inverted U-shaped perception of pleasantness. These findings suggest that the pleasantness of touch is influenced by the velocity of the strokes in both visual and physical touch with a non-human stimulation.</P> <P><B>Highlights</B></P> <P> <UL> <LI> Felt and seen touch elicits similar behavioral patterns of pleasantness. </LI> <LI> Affective touch is modulated by the velocity of stroking without an inter-personal interaction. </LI> <LI> The perception of pleasantness upon touch involves both visual and haptic information. </LI> </UL> </P>
Emotion cards, anger management game, motivational stickers
Teachers TV Teachers TVxD19 Emotion + Function(感性 + 機能)
홍익대학교 쿠니히사 이토(kunihisa Ito), 이근(Lee Keun)Psychophysics and Emotion Research for Food Sensory Science
이화여자대학교 Kannapon LopetcharatICT: A Vision of the Future?
Teachers TV Teachers TVScience: New Visions in Neuroscience
Teachers TV Teachers TV