Discriminative and affective touch converge: Somatosensory cortex represents Aß input in a CT-like manner
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Abstract
Current theory divides the human mechanical sense into discriminative and affective systems. A discriminative system supports tactile exploration and manipulation via fast Aß signaling, whereas an affective system supports the pleasure of friendly interpersonal touch via slow CT signaling. To probe this system segregation, we recorded the electroencephalogram from participants being stroked and reporting stroke pleasantness. We observed a somatosensory negativity that was maximal for CT optimal as compared with sub-optimal velocities, that predicted subjective pleasantness, and showed only for stroking of hairy skin known to be CT innervated. Importantly, the latency of this negativity preceded C fiber input to the brain by several hundred milliseconds and is best explained by interactions between CT and Aß processes in the spinal cord. Our data challenge the divide between discriminative and affective touch implying instead that both fast Aß and slow CT signaling play an important role in tactile pleasure.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00