Abstract

Touch, such as affective caress, can be interpreted as being pleasant. The emotional valence that is assigned to touch is related to certain bottom-up factors, such as the optimal activation of C-tactile (CT) afferents. Tactile processing with a hedonic or emotional component has been defined as affective touch—a component that CT fibers are likely to convey. Tactile deficiencies are frequent in the psychiatric population but also in healthy people with disorganized attachment; accordingly, it is likely that affective difficulties in adults with disorganized attachment are reflected in altered perception of affective touch. To test this hypothesis, we combined methods from clinical psychology, psychophysics, and neuroimaging. We found that people with a history of traumatic parental bonds and a disorganized attachment pattern perceive a “caress-like” stimulus as being unpleasant, whereas participants with organized attachment consider the same tactile stimulation to be pleasant. Further, unlike in organized adults, the responses of disorganized adults to CT and non-CT stimulation activated limbic and paralimbic structures in a fight-or-flight manner, suggesting that early experiences with parental deficiencies shape the physiological responses of peripheral CT fibers and central nervous networks.

Highlights

  • In humans, touch is the first sensory system to develop[1,2]

  • Given the absence of sex distribution differences between Disorganized Attachment (DA) and Organized Attachment (OA) groups (χ2 = 1.37; p = 0.18), sex was not included as a covariate in the statistical analyses

  • We developed an fMRI study in which Affective stimulation and Non-affective stimulations were provided to a subgroup of individuals from Study 1, with organized or disorganized attachment

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Summary

Introduction

Touch is the first sensory system to develop[1,2]. The earliest sensations that we experience are tactile. We examined whether people with disorganized attachment perceive affective touch as being less pleasant than those with organized attachment.

Results
Conclusion
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