
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Claudia Hammond looks at the neuroscience behind our sense of touch. Why does a gentle touch from a loved one make us feel good? This is a question that neuroscientists have been exploring since the late 1990's, following the discovery of a special class of nerve fibres in the skin. There seems to be a neurological system dedicated to sensing and processing the gentle stroking you might receive from a parent or lover or friend, or that a monkey might receive from another grooming it. Claudia talks to neuroscientists Victoria Abraira, Rebecca Bohme, Katerina Fotopoulou and Francis McGlone who all investigate our sense of emotional touch, and she hears from Ian Waterman who lost his sense of touch at the age of eighteen.
By BBC World Service4.4
939939 ratings
Claudia Hammond looks at the neuroscience behind our sense of touch. Why does a gentle touch from a loved one make us feel good? This is a question that neuroscientists have been exploring since the late 1990's, following the discovery of a special class of nerve fibres in the skin. There seems to be a neurological system dedicated to sensing and processing the gentle stroking you might receive from a parent or lover or friend, or that a monkey might receive from another grooming it. Claudia talks to neuroscientists Victoria Abraira, Rebecca Bohme, Katerina Fotopoulou and Francis McGlone who all investigate our sense of emotional touch, and she hears from Ian Waterman who lost his sense of touch at the age of eighteen.

7,757 Listeners

1,065 Listeners

5,471 Listeners

1,821 Listeners

967 Listeners

1,789 Listeners

1,047 Listeners

2,077 Listeners

609 Listeners

765 Listeners

89 Listeners

403 Listeners

427 Listeners

827 Listeners

736 Listeners

230 Listeners

333 Listeners

359 Listeners

479 Listeners

244 Listeners

3,221 Listeners

743 Listeners

115 Listeners

1,041 Listeners