The human brain recruits similar brain regions when a state is experienced (e.g., touch, pain, actions) and when that state is passively observed in other individuals. In adults, seeing other people being touched activates similar brain areas as when we experience touch ourselves. Here we show that already by four months of age, cortical responses to tactile stimulation are modulated by visual information specifying another person being touched. We recorded somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) in 4-month-old infants while they were presented with brief vibrotactile stimuli to the hands. At the same time that the tactile stimuli were presented the infants observed another person’s hand being touched by a soft paintbrush or approached by th...
Human infants cannot report their experiences, limiting what we can learn about their bodily awarene...
Human infants cannot report their experiences, limiting what we can learn about their bodily awarene...
We asked whether, in the first year of life, the infant brain can support the dynamic crossmodal int...
The human brain recruits similar brain regions when a state is experienced (e.g., touch, pain, actio...
The human brain recruits similar brain regions when a state is experienced (e.g., touch, pain, actio...
Within cognitive neuroscience, there is burgeoning interest in how the body is represented in the ad...
Observing others being touched activates similar brain areas as those activated when one experiences...
Observing others being touched activates similar brain areas as those activated when one experiences...
Physical expressions of affection play a foundational role in early brain development, but the neu...
When we sense a touch, our brains take account of our current limb position to determine the locatio...
Touch is our most interpersonal sense, and so it stands to reason that we represent not only our own...
Touch is our most interpersonal sense, and so it stands to reason that we represent not only our own...
In adults, affective touch leads to widespread activation of cortical areas including posterior Supe...
In adults, affective touch leads to widespread activation of cortical areas including posterior Supe...
Touch provides more than sensory input for discrimination of what is on the skin. From early in deve...
Human infants cannot report their experiences, limiting what we can learn about their bodily awarene...
Human infants cannot report their experiences, limiting what we can learn about their bodily awarene...
We asked whether, in the first year of life, the infant brain can support the dynamic crossmodal int...
The human brain recruits similar brain regions when a state is experienced (e.g., touch, pain, actio...
The human brain recruits similar brain regions when a state is experienced (e.g., touch, pain, actio...
Within cognitive neuroscience, there is burgeoning interest in how the body is represented in the ad...
Observing others being touched activates similar brain areas as those activated when one experiences...
Observing others being touched activates similar brain areas as those activated when one experiences...
Physical expressions of affection play a foundational role in early brain development, but the neu...
When we sense a touch, our brains take account of our current limb position to determine the locatio...
Touch is our most interpersonal sense, and so it stands to reason that we represent not only our own...
Touch is our most interpersonal sense, and so it stands to reason that we represent not only our own...
In adults, affective touch leads to widespread activation of cortical areas including posterior Supe...
In adults, affective touch leads to widespread activation of cortical areas including posterior Supe...
Touch provides more than sensory input for discrimination of what is on the skin. From early in deve...
Human infants cannot report their experiences, limiting what we can learn about their bodily awarene...
Human infants cannot report their experiences, limiting what we can learn about their bodily awarene...
We asked whether, in the first year of life, the infant brain can support the dynamic crossmodal int...