Observed Touch on a Non-Human Face Is Not Remapped onto the Human Observer's Own Face
Author(s) -
Brianna Beck,
Caterina Bertini,
Cristina Scarpazza,
Elisabetta Làdavas
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0073681
Subject(s) - facial expression , observer (physics) , face (sociological concept) , somatosensory system , psychology , computer vision , tactile stimuli , face perception , communication , artificial intelligence , perception , computer science , cognitive psychology , neuroscience , physics , sensory system , social science , sociology , quantum mechanics
Visual remapping of touch (VRT) is a phenomenon in which seeing a human face being touched enhances detection of tactile stimuli on the observer's own face, especially when the observed face expresses fear. This study tested whether VRT would occur when seeing touch on monkey faces and whether it would be similarly modulated by facial expressions. Human participants detected near-threshold tactile stimulation on their own cheeks while watching fearful, happy, and neutral human or monkey faces being concurrently touched or merely approached by fingers. We predicted minimal VRT for neutral and happy monkey faces but greater VRT for fearful monkey faces. The results with human faces replicated previous findings, demonstrating stronger VRT for fearful expressions than for happy or neutral expressions. However, there was no VRT (i.e. no difference between accuracy in touch and no-touch trials) for any of the monkey faces, regardless of facial expression, suggesting that touch on a non-human face is not remapped onto the somatosensory system of the human observer.
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