Noli Me Tangere: Social Touch, Tactile Defensiveness, and Communication in Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Aims and Methods
3. Discussion
- Hyper-responsiveness to common environmental stimuli. Hyper-responsive individuals respond to low-intensity stimuli, showing a low response threshold for sensory events and a lack of habituation to continuous sensory stimulation. Therefore, they receive and respond to too many stimuli and avoid all the situations to which they attribute a negative affective value and that most people consider harmless.
- Hypo-responsiveness to common environmental stimuli. Hypo-responsive individuals respond to high-intensity stimuli, showing a high response threshold for sensory events, including high pain tolerance and a low responsiveness to sensory inputs.
- Sensory seeking behaviors. Seeker individuals perceive as pleasurable neutral stimuli and repeat a specific unusual stimulus situation that they consider particularly interesting and exciting.
4. Tactile System: Developmental Primacy
5. Tactile System: Discriminative and Affective Dimension
6. Social Touch and Social Communication
7. Tactile Threshold or Emotional and Social Impairment
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Smirni, D.; Smirni, P.; Carotenuto, M.; Parisi, L.; Quatrosi, G.; Roccella, M. Noli Me Tangere: Social Touch, Tactile Defensiveness, and Communication in Neurodevelopmental Disorders. Brain Sci. 2019, 9, 368. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci9120368
Smirni D, Smirni P, Carotenuto M, Parisi L, Quatrosi G, Roccella M. Noli Me Tangere: Social Touch, Tactile Defensiveness, and Communication in Neurodevelopmental Disorders. Brain Sciences. 2019; 9(12):368. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci9120368
Chicago/Turabian StyleSmirni, Daniela, Pietro Smirni, Marco Carotenuto, Lucia Parisi, Giuseppe Quatrosi, and Michele Roccella. 2019. "Noli Me Tangere: Social Touch, Tactile Defensiveness, and Communication in Neurodevelopmental Disorders" Brain Sciences 9, no. 12: 368. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci9120368