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Gentle Touch Perception Across the Lifespan

Pleasant, affective touch provides various health benefits, including stress and depression relief. There is a dichotomy between mechanoreceptive afferents that predominantly signal discriminative (myelinated A-beta) and affective (unmyelinated C-tactile) aspects of touch. It is well documented that...

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Published in:Psychology and aging 2016-03, Vol.31 (2), p.176-184
Main Authors: Sehlstedt, Isac, Ignell, Hanna, Backlund Wasling, Helena, Ackerley, Rochelle, Olausson, Håkan, Croy, Ilona
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container_start_page 176
container_title Psychology and aging
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creator Sehlstedt, Isac
Ignell, Hanna
Backlund Wasling, Helena
Ackerley, Rochelle
Olausson, Håkan
Croy, Ilona
description Pleasant, affective touch provides various health benefits, including stress and depression relief. There is a dichotomy between mechanoreceptive afferents that predominantly signal discriminative (myelinated A-beta) and affective (unmyelinated C-tactile) aspects of touch. It is well documented that discriminative abilities of touch decline with age. However, a thorough investigation of how the pleasant aspects of touch develop with age has not been previously attempted. Here, we investigated the relationship between age and psychophysical ratings in response to gentle stroking touch. One hundred twenty participants (60 males, 60 females) ages 13-82 years were presented with C-tactile optimal and suboptimal stroking velocities, and rated pleasantness and intensity. Moreover, to examine the specificity of age effects on touch perception, we used olfactory stimuli as a cross-sensory comparison. For all ages, we found that C-tactile optimal stimuli were rated significantly more pleasant than C-tactile suboptimal stimuli. Although, both touch and olfactory intensity ratings were negatively correlated with age, a positive correlation between pleasantness ratings of touch (but not olfactory stimuli) and age was found. We conclude that the affective, but not the discriminative, aspects of touch are enhanced with increasing age. The increase of pleasantness of all touch stimuli in late adulthood is discussed in relation to cognitive modulations.
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There is a dichotomy between mechanoreceptive afferents that predominantly signal discriminative (myelinated A-beta) and affective (unmyelinated C-tactile) aspects of touch. It is well documented that discriminative abilities of touch decline with age. However, a thorough investigation of how the pleasant aspects of touch develop with age has not been previously attempted. Here, we investigated the relationship between age and psychophysical ratings in response to gentle stroking touch. One hundred twenty participants (60 males, 60 females) ages 13-82 years were presented with C-tactile optimal and suboptimal stroking velocities, and rated pleasantness and intensity. Moreover, to examine the specificity of age effects on touch perception, we used olfactory stimuli as a cross-sensory comparison. For all ages, we found that C-tactile optimal stimuli were rated significantly more pleasant than C-tactile suboptimal stimuli. Although, both touch and olfactory intensity ratings were negatively correlated with age, a positive correlation between pleasantness ratings of touch (but not olfactory stimuli) and age was found. We conclude that the affective, but not the discriminative, aspects of touch are enhanced with increasing age. 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ispartof Psychology and aging, 2016-03, Vol.31 (2), p.176-184
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source APA PsycARTICLES; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Adults
age
Age differences
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Aging
Aging - physiology
Aging - psychology
C-tactile afferents
Chemosensory perception
Cognitive ability
cutaneous mechanoreceptors
Female
fiber density
Geriatrics & Gerontology
Health
Health Sciences
Human
human hairy skin
Humans
Hälsovetenskap
Life span
Male
Middle Aged
nerve
normative data
odor identification
Odorants
Olfactory Perception - physiology
pleasant touch
Pleasure
Psychology
Psychophysics
Relief
Sensory perception
social support
Tactual Perception
Touch
Touch Perception - physiology
unmyelinated tactile afferents
Young Adult
title Gentle Touch Perception Across the Lifespan
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