Humans use touch to maintain their social relationships, and the emotional qualities of touch depend on who touches whom. However, it is not known how affective and social dimensions of touch are processed in the brain. We measured haemodynamic brain activity with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) from 19 subjects (10 males), while they were touched on their upper thigh by either their romantic partner, or an unfamiliar female or male confederate or saw the hand of one of these individuals near their upper thigh but were not touched. We used multi-voxel pattern analysis on pre-defined regions of interest to reveal areas that encode social touch in a relationship-specific manner. The accuracy of the machine learning classifier to ...
Somatosensation as a proximal sense can have a strong impact on our attitude toward physical objects...
Social perception commonly employs multiple sources of information. The present study aimed at inves...
Anticipating the sensorimotor consequences of an action for both self and other is fundamental for a...
| openaire: EC/H2020/313000/EU//SOCIAL BRAINHumans use touch to maintain their social relationships,...
Seeing social touch triggers a strong social-affective response that involves multiple brain network...
Interpersonal touch conveys a vast amount of socio-affective information between interacting people....
Another person’s caress is one of the most powerful of all emotional social signals. How much the pr...
Copyright © 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.Touch is central to in...
Social touch may modulate emotions, but the neurobehavioral correlates are poorly understood. Here, ...
Conflicting evidence points to the contribution of several key nodes of the 'social brain' to the pr...
Recent studies indicate that the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) is active not only when touch is ...
Observers can simulate aspects of other people's tactile experiences. We asked whether they do so wh...
Observing others being touched activates similar brain areas as those activated when one experiences...
Interpersonal touch is intimately related to the emotional bond between the touch giver and the touc...
Anticipating the sensorimotor consequences of an action for both self and other is fundamental for a...
Somatosensation as a proximal sense can have a strong impact on our attitude toward physical objects...
Social perception commonly employs multiple sources of information. The present study aimed at inves...
Anticipating the sensorimotor consequences of an action for both self and other is fundamental for a...
| openaire: EC/H2020/313000/EU//SOCIAL BRAINHumans use touch to maintain their social relationships,...
Seeing social touch triggers a strong social-affective response that involves multiple brain network...
Interpersonal touch conveys a vast amount of socio-affective information between interacting people....
Another person’s caress is one of the most powerful of all emotional social signals. How much the pr...
Copyright © 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.Touch is central to in...
Social touch may modulate emotions, but the neurobehavioral correlates are poorly understood. Here, ...
Conflicting evidence points to the contribution of several key nodes of the 'social brain' to the pr...
Recent studies indicate that the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) is active not only when touch is ...
Observers can simulate aspects of other people's tactile experiences. We asked whether they do so wh...
Observing others being touched activates similar brain areas as those activated when one experiences...
Interpersonal touch is intimately related to the emotional bond between the touch giver and the touc...
Anticipating the sensorimotor consequences of an action for both self and other is fundamental for a...
Somatosensation as a proximal sense can have a strong impact on our attitude toward physical objects...
Social perception commonly employs multiple sources of information. The present study aimed at inves...
Anticipating the sensorimotor consequences of an action for both self and other is fundamental for a...