Touch communicates distinct emotions.
DePauw University · University of California, Berkeley
Abstract
The study of emotional signaling has focused almost exclusively on the face and voice. In 2 studies, the authors investigated whether people can identify emotions from the experience of being touched by a stranger on the arm (without seeing the touch). In the 3rd study, they investigated whether observers can identify emotions from watching someone being touched on the arm. Two kinds of evidence suggest that humans can communicate numerous emotions with touch. First, participants in the United States (Study 1) and Spain (Study 2) could decode anger, fear, disgust, love, gratitude, and sympathy via touch at much-better-than-chance levels. Second, fine-grained coding documented specific touch behaviors…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 2.98
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 42
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Gratitude
- Psychology
- Disgust
- Anger
- Sympathy
- Social psychology
- Happiness
- Sadness