Abstract

The neural mechanisms facilitating the experience of vicarious social touch are largely unknown. The right inferior frontal gyrus (rIFG) has been suggested as part of a simulation observation-execution neural network that plays a key role in the perception of tactile stimuli. Considering that vicarious social touch involves vicarious sharing of emotions, we hypothesized that emotional empathy, i.e., the ability to feel what another individual is feeling, modulates the neural responses to vicarious touch. To examine the role of the rIFG in vicarious touch and its modulation by levels of emotional empathy, we used anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on forty participants who observed photos depicting social touch, nonsocial touch or no touch during tDCS or sham stimulation. The results show that while participants with high levels of emotional empathy exhibited no change in ratings of vicarious social touch, participants with low levels of emotional empathy rate human touch as more emotional following anodal stimulation of the rIFG than following sham stimulation. These findings indicate that emotional responses to vicarious social touch are associated with rIFG activity and are modulated by levels of emotional empathy. This result has major therapeutic potential for individuals with low empathic abilities, such as those with ASD.

Highlights

  • Social touch encompasses a large variety of behaviors that involve physical contact between humans, ranging from positive and affective gestures of touch through neutral, accidental or functional touch to negative touch that includes violence (Gallace and Spence, 2010)

  • We showed that anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) stimulation targeting the right inferior frontal gyrus (rIFG) had a differential impact on emotionality ratings of vicarious touch, depending on the emotional empathy levels of the participants

  • Participants with low emotional empathy rated interpersonal touch as more emotional following anodal tDCS stimulation to the rIFG, whereas no such increase emerged among participants with high emotional empathy

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Summary

Introduction

Social touch encompasses a large variety of behaviors that involve physical contact between humans, ranging from positive and affective gestures of touch through neutral, accidental or functional touch to negative touch that includes violence (Gallace and Spence, 2010). We focused on positive affiliative and affective touch between humans. Throughout life, gestures of positive social touch such as hand-holding, hugs or gentle caresses serve as a powerful means of eliciting and modulating our feelings and emotions (Hertenstein et al, 2009, 2006; Kirsch et al, 2017). Touch is used to enhance the meaning of other forms of verbal and non-verbal communication (Gallace and Spence, 2010). A recent large cross-cultural study showed that human social touch reflects an essential mechanism supporting the maintenance of social bonds (Suvilehto et al, 2015)

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