[HTML][HTML] Social touch and human development

CJ Cascio, D Moore, F McGlone - Developmental cognitive neuroscience, 2019 - Elsevier
Social touch is a powerful force in human development, sha** social reward, attachment,
cognitive, communication, and emotional regulation from infancy and throughout life. In this …

Revisiting the roots of attachment: A review of the biological and psychological effects of maternal skin-to-skin contact and carrying of full-term infants

H Norholt - Infant Behavior and Development, 2020 - Elsevier
During the early period of hypothesis building and empirical testing of attachment theory, a
major emphasis was placed on mother-infant physical contact. In spite of this, mother-infant …

Mentalizing homeostasis: The social origins of interoceptive inference

A Fotopoulou, M Tsakiris - Neuropsychoanalysis, 2017 - Taylor & Francis
Is the self already relational in its very bodily foundations? The question of whether our
mental life is initially and primarily shaped by embodied dimensions of the individual or by …

The neuroscience of social feelings: mechanisms of adaptive social functioning

PJ Eslinger, S Anders, T Ballarini, S Boutros… - Neuroscience & …, 2021 - Elsevier
Social feelings have conceptual and empirical connections with affect and emotion. In this
review, we discuss how they relate to cognition, emotion, behavior and well-being. We …

Neurobiology of culturally common maternal responses to infant cry

MH Bornstein, DL Putnick, P Rigo… - Proceedings of the …, 2017 - National Acad Sciences
This report coordinates assessments of five types of behavioral responses in new mothers to
their own infants' cries with neurobiological responses in new mothers to their own infants' …

[HTML][HTML] Affective regulation through touch: homeostatic and allostatic mechanisms

A Fotopoulou, M Von Mohr, C Krahé - Current Opinion in Behavioral …, 2022 - Elsevier
Highlights•Social, affective regulation, including through touch, is multidimensional.•Social
touch appears to have three interrelated functions in affective regulation.•Social touch …

[BOOK][B] Why we dance: A philosophy of bodily becoming

KL LaMothe - 2015 - degruyter.com
Why we dance: A philosophy of bodily becoming Why We Dance Page 2 Page 3 Why We
Dance A Philosophy of Bodily Becoming Kimerer L. LaMothe COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS …

Singing delays the onset of infant distress

M Corbeil, SE Trehub, I Peretz - Infancy, 2016 - Wiley Online Library
Much is known about the efficacy of infant‐directed (ID) speech and singing for capturing
attention, but little is known about their role in regulating affect. In Experiment 1, infants 7–10 …

Familiar songs reduce infant distress.

LK Cirelli, SE Trehub - Developmental psychology, 2020 - psycnet.apa.org
Parents commonly vocalize to infants to mitigate their distress, especially when holding them
is not possible. Here we examined the relative efficacy of parents' speech and singing …

The touched self: Psychological and philosophical perspectives on proximal intersubjectivity and the self

A Ciaunica, A Fotopoulou - 2017 - direct.mit.edu
Whenever I perceive something or feel an emotion, these perceptions and feelings are
somehow given to me as mine. The idea that our everyday experiences are characterized by …