Unraveling the Mysteries of Tickling (2024)

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  • Published8 Feb 2021
  • Author Hannah Zuckerman
  • Source BrainFacts/SfN

Unraveling the Mysteries of Tickling (1)

At Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet, these 3D Systems Touch haptic devices, affectionately named IASONAS and TALOS from Greek mythology, help humans perceive their touches as more ticklish.

Konstantina Kilteni

In 2019, two robots at Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet, each armed with a stylus, helped humans do something they can’t do on their own: make their touch feel more ticklish. Konstantina Kilteni, assistant professor in the department of neuroscience, used the robots to study self-generated touch. The robots served as mediators — when a participant moved the first robot, the second robot touched the participant’s arm. The team then blindfolded participants and introduced a small delay between the participant moving the first robot and the second robot’s touch. Why? Because tickle has a lot to do with how and when we predict touch.

From her previous studies, Kilteni knew self-generated touches feel weaker than external touches. But, a self-generated touch feels more intense when researchers introduce a small delay. Kilteni wanted to examine two things. Firstly, would participants feel the delayed touches were less intense if they grew used to the delays? And secondly, after removing the delays, would the non-delayed self-generated touch feel stronger and more ticklish? The team found evidence supporting both these questions.

This was Kilteni’s first study on tickle attenuation — how the brain dampens a self-generated touch so it doesn’t feel as ticklish compared to someone else tickling you. BrainFacts.org asked Kilteni what happens in the brain when we are tickled and why we can’t give ourselves the same giggles from the tickles.

How does our brain perceive tickling?

There are two types of tickling. Knismesis is a light pressure that induces an itchy sensation. Try stroking your fingers along your arm and you’ll get a moving, itch sensation. Like any touch, this sensation activates somatosensory areas as well as the thalamus — a relay area where the sensory information arrives. Other studies have found knismesis activates motor areas, which are related to the desire to scratch, and areas that encode emotional aspects of itch, like the insula.

Gargalesis, the other type of tickling, is induced by deep pressure on specific areas like the armpits or ribcage. It’s typically accompanied by laughter. We don’t know how the brain specifically processes this sensation and what exact pathway it follows.

Why are people ticklish?

Scientists found knismesis in many species. From an evolutionary perspective, the itchy sensation tells you something’s crawling on your skin that you should remove.
We don’t know the purpose of gargalesis, so it’s difficult to answer. We don’t know if it’s a social response or a reflex reaction that serves something we haven’t yet identified.

Why can’t you tickle yourself?

You can induce knismesis — the itchy-tickly sensation — with a feather or your fingers to a certain extent. Thanks to your cerebellum, you can’t induce gargalesis yourself. This brain area receives signals from the sensory system, the motor system, and other areas. It then regulates movements. We’ve found the cerebellum can tell when you or someone else is producing a touch. So, when you try tickling yourself, your brain already knows when, where, and how strong the touch will be. When the brain can make this prediction, it dampens the activity in the somatosensory cortices, making the touch feel less ticklish. When someone else tickles you, your brain can’t make those predictions so the sensation feels much stronger.

Some scientists speculate the brain does this so it can dedicate more processing resources to external-generated stimuli. An external touch is more likely to be harmful or threatening than a self-generated touch.

Why do we laugh when we get tickled?

It’s not clear whether tickling laughter is similar to humorous laughter. It’s not well established if we laugh because we’re having fun since many people don’t like being tickled but still laugh.

There’s a theory that tickling serves for social bonding. Scientists have observed mothers often tickle their babies, and this helps form their connection. But many people don’t like being tickled. We like hugs, which is a social bond, but why would it serve as social bonding if people don’t like getting tickled?

In 1999, researchers at the University of California examined how people experienced getting tickled by a person or a machine. They found participants were tickled by both a human and a machine to the same extent. This gives some evidence that tickling is a low-level reflex response. Now, my team and I are interested in moving to the field of ticklishness to understand the mechanisms and purpose of tickling.

What are some difficulties to studying tickling?

We don’t have an automated way to induce gargalesis. With a robot we can study knismesis but gargalesis is tricky. We also don’t have an objective measurement of how tickly something feels. We can ask participants to rate how tickly they perceive the stimulus, but it would help to have an objective measurement.

Another methodological difficulty arises during neuroimaging studies. If we induce tickling, participants may start moving around and laughing. Moving around affects the signal we’re able to capture.

About the Author

Hannah Zuckerman

Hannah is the former Production and Editorial Associate for BrainFacts.org.She graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 2014 with a degree in history. She previously worked at Princeton University Press and the art magazineSculpture.

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Related Topics Touch

Unraveling the Mysteries of Tickling (2024)

FAQs

Is it rare that I can tickle myself? ›

Most people cannot tickle themselves. However, some individuals with schizophrenia may be able to do so, possibly because they are less aware of the consequences of their movements. Schizophrenia is a condition that can affect a person's thinking, speech, movement, and perception of the world.

Can I become less ticklish? ›

Some people find that breaking a sweat can help them feel less ticklish or less likely to react to being tickled. Head out for a walk, bike ride, swim, or any other type of physical activity that appeals to you, and see if it helps. Some people find that getting exercise helps lessen the ticklish feeling overall.

What percent of people aren't ticklish? ›

While many people assume that other people enjoy tickling, a recent survey of 84 college students indicated that only 32% of respondents enjoy being tickled, with 32% giving neutral responses and 36% stating that they do not enjoy being tickled.

Is tickling a child inappropriate? ›

Tickling can be a form of grooming, just like hugging. Could be a way of making the child comfortable with that person or with the physical touch. So while the act of tickling may not necessarily be molestation, if it's clear the child doesn't want it like OP's example, that's a huge red flag.

What happens if you get tickled nonstop? ›

Extreme, nonstop tickling can lead to hypoxia, which means not enough oxygen is getting to your brain. “Tickling has, in fact, been used as a torture device,” Dr. Vyas confirms, “and people have actually been tickled to death.” Even when tickling isn't quite so barbaric, many people don't find it enjoyable.

What happens if you tickle too much? ›

Several reported tickling as a type of physical abuse they experienced, and based on these reports it was revealed that abusive tickling is capable of provoking extreme physiological reactions in the victim, such as vomiting, urinary incontinence, and losing consciousness due to inability to breathe.

Why are older people not ticklish? ›

During adolescence, tickling takes on a flirtatious tone, and after middle age it dramatically declines. Perhaps due to decreased opportunities or shunted sensorial responses that come with aging, the pleasurable agony of a tickle remains the stuff of childhood, at the root of our emotional being.

What is hypergargalesthesia? ›

Some people do indeed have an extreme tickle response known as Hypergargalesthesia. This condition is characterized by an intense sensitivity to tickling, leading to an overwhelming reaction to touch. Hypergargalesthesia is not yet fully understood by scientists.

How to desensitize yourself to tickling? ›

When someone attempts to tickle you, put your hand on their hand. Grossman suggests that this action will help your brain better predict the sensation of being tickled, and help you suppress your tickle response.

What was tickling originally used for? ›

In ancient China, tickle torture was used as a way to punish the noble class. It was preferred over other types of discipline because it left no marks and the victim would recover fairly quickly. It was also used as a torture tool in ancient Japan, where it was called merciless tickling.

What happens if you are tickled for 24 hours? ›

It could cause you both mental and physical harm. At the 24 hour Mark, you'd have lost control of your body. and you wouldn't be able to regulate your breathing, and you'd be very stressed. You could have asphyxia, a brain aneurysm or a heart attack.

What does it mean if a girl is not ticklish? ›

“If someone isn't ticklish or actively dislikes tickling even when calm, that doesn't mean something is wrong with them—it's just a personal preference.”

What is the tickling curse? ›

Harry Potter's use of this charm on Draco Malfoy at the Duelling Club. The Tickling Charm, also known as the Tickle Charm, (Rictusempra) was a charm that caused the target to buckle with laughter, weakening them.

Why shouldn't you tickle someone? ›

It can cause physical harm

It can also cause respiratory problems, especially for children with asthma. Furthermore, if the child is tickled too forcefully or in sensitive areas, such as the neck or groin, it can cause pain, discomfort, and even trauma.

Why shouldn't you tickle a baby's feet? ›

Excessive tickling can also lead to anxiety in children. Not only this, but tickling can even cause death from asphyxia, brain aneurysms or other stress-related injuries when done constantly. It is better to avoid tickling the baby to make sure that there are no problems due to it,” said Dr Kathwate.

Can normal people tickle themselves? ›

Pressure on certain sensitive parts of the body can lead to a tickling sensation. Yet even the most ticklish person will have a hard time trying to tickle themselves. That's because our brains anticipate our touch, effectively canceling out our own tickles.

Where is the only place you can tickle yourself? ›

This doesn't always work, but some people report a mildly ticklish sensation when they barely touch their skin with their fingertips and move them around in a circular motion. The best places for this are the inside of your elbow, your neck, or the back of your knee.

Why is it possible to tickle someone else but not to tickle yourself? ›

The reason you can't tickle yourself is that when you move a part of your own body, a part of your brain monitors the movement and anticipates the sensations that it will cause.

Why am I so easily tickled? ›

Some people are more sensitive to touch than others, so skin sensitivity can play a role in how ticklish a person is. A person with a loss of feeling in a particular part of the body, or with desensitized nerves, would be less likely to experience the tickling response.

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