3.8 Article

Developmental Perspectives on Interpersonal Affective Touch

Journal

TOPOI-AN INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF PHILOSOPHY
Volume 39, Issue 3, Pages 575-586

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11245-018-9565-1

Keywords

Interpersonal affective touch; CT system; Self-other distinction; Development; Psychological self; Body representation

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In the last decade, philosophy, neuroscience and psychology alike have paid increasing attention to the study of interpersonal affective touch, which refers to the emotional and motivational facets of tactile sensation. Some aspects of affective touch have been linked to a neurophysiologically specialised system, namely the C tactile (CT) system. While the role of this system for affiliation, social bonding and communication of emotions have been widely investigated, only recently researchers have started to focus on the potential role of interpersonal affective touch in acquiring awareness of the body as our own, i.e. as belonging to our psychological 'self'. We review and discuss recent developmental and adult findings, pointing to the central role of interpersonal affective touch in body awareness and social cognition in health and disorders. We propose that interpersonal affective touch, as an interoceptive modality invested of a social nature, can uniquely contribute to the ongoing debate in philosophy about the primacy of the relational nature of the minimal self.

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