Can impersonal touch replace interpersonal touch? An investigation using the rubber hand illusion
Jaehyoung Bae, Christian Wallraven

TL;DR
The study explores whether impersonal touch can feel as pleasant as interpersonal touch using a rubber hand illusion experiment.
Contribution
It shows that impersonal touch can elicit similar pleasantness as interpersonal touch in a body-ownership illusion.
Findings
Impersonal touch at CT-compatible parameters was as pleasant as interpersonal touch.
The rubber hand illusion was equally strong in both touch conditions.
NFT scores and touch deprivation did not correlate with illusion strength or pleasantness.
Abstract
Our socio-emotional development and well-being critically depends on interpersonal tactile interactions, which are sensed by the skin through C-tactile (CT) afferents that respond to gentle, slow touch at typical skin temperatures. In the present study, we investigated whether impersonal touch would be able to provide similar pleasantness compared to interpersonal touch within a body-ownership illusion paradigm. To provide impersonal touch at similar parameters, we used a thermal probe kept at 32∘C (typical skin-to-skin temperature) compared to a flat hand as interpersonal touch. Both forms of touch were performed at CT-compatible speeds of 3cm/s by a male trained experimenter within a classic rubber hand illusion (RHI) paradigm in two counter-balanced within-participant conditions. A sample of N=45 healthy participants was tested and pleasantness ratings, touch deprivation, and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTactile and Sensory Interactions · Virtual Reality Applications and Impacts · Multisensory perception and integration
