This paper provides a theoretical exploration of how comparative research on the expression of emotions has traditionally focused on the visual mode and argues that, given the neurophysiological, developmental, and behavioral evidence that links touch with social interactions, focusing on touch can become an ideal mode to understand the communication of emotions in human and non-human primates. This evidence shows that touch is intrinsically linked with social cognition because it motivates human and non-human animals, from birth, to form social bonds. It will be shown that touch is one of the modes of interaction used by the mother-infant or caregiver-infant dyad that facilitates the expression of emotions by the infant (and...
Given that the cognitive and affective processes underlying empathy do not fossilize, studies of the...
Touch provides more than sensory input for discrimination of what is on the skin. From early in deve...
Grooming is a widespread activity throughout the animal kingdom, but in primates (including humans) ...
In humans, infants respond positively to slow, gentle stroking—processed by C-tactile (CT) nerve fib...
Social affective touch is an important aspect of close relationships in humans. It has been also obs...
Human touch has an enormous power to engender and mediate meaning in the human mind, from the emotio...
Touch forms a central component of social bonding, both in primates and in humans, via the brain’s e...
Recent findings have shown that the neurophysiological mechanisms involved in human massage and care...
The more social aspects of touch, despite their relevance to numerous domains of human behavior, fro...
Nonhuman primates use social touch for maintenance and reinforcement of social structures, yet the r...
Empathy, the sharing and understanding of others’ emotional states, is a core feature of the human s...
Though rarely included in studies of parent-infant interactions, affectionate touch plays a unique a...
Nonhuman primates use social touch for maintenance and reinforcement of social structures, yet the r...
Let’s not forget that the little emotions are the great captains of our lives and we obey them witho...
The study of emotion elicitation in the caregiver–infant dyad has focused almost ex-clusively on the...
Given that the cognitive and affective processes underlying empathy do not fossilize, studies of the...
Touch provides more than sensory input for discrimination of what is on the skin. From early in deve...
Grooming is a widespread activity throughout the animal kingdom, but in primates (including humans) ...
In humans, infants respond positively to slow, gentle stroking—processed by C-tactile (CT) nerve fib...
Social affective touch is an important aspect of close relationships in humans. It has been also obs...
Human touch has an enormous power to engender and mediate meaning in the human mind, from the emotio...
Touch forms a central component of social bonding, both in primates and in humans, via the brain’s e...
Recent findings have shown that the neurophysiological mechanisms involved in human massage and care...
The more social aspects of touch, despite their relevance to numerous domains of human behavior, fro...
Nonhuman primates use social touch for maintenance and reinforcement of social structures, yet the r...
Empathy, the sharing and understanding of others’ emotional states, is a core feature of the human s...
Though rarely included in studies of parent-infant interactions, affectionate touch plays a unique a...
Nonhuman primates use social touch for maintenance and reinforcement of social structures, yet the r...
Let’s not forget that the little emotions are the great captains of our lives and we obey them witho...
The study of emotion elicitation in the caregiver–infant dyad has focused almost ex-clusively on the...
Given that the cognitive and affective processes underlying empathy do not fossilize, studies of the...
Touch provides more than sensory input for discrimination of what is on the skin. From early in deve...
Grooming is a widespread activity throughout the animal kingdom, but in primates (including humans) ...