Abstract
AbstractHuman-human social touch improves mood and alleviates pain. No studies have so far tested the effect of human-robot emotional touch on experimentally induced pain ratings, on mood and on oxytocin levels in healthy young adults. Here, we assessed the effect of touching the robot PARO on pain perception, on mood and on salivary oxytocin levels, in 83 young adults. We measured their perceived pain, happiness state, and salivary oxytocin. For the 63 participants in the PARO group, pain was assessed in three conditions: Baseline, Touch (touching PARO) and No-Touch (PARO present). The control group (20 participants) underwent the same measurements without ever encountering PARO. There was a decrease in pain ratings and in oxytocin levels and an increase in happiness ratings compared to baseline only in the PARO group. The Touch condition yielded a larger decrease in pain ratings compared to No-Touch. These effects correlated with the participants’ positive perceptions of the interaction with PARO. Participants with higher perceived ability to communicate with PARO experienced a greater hypoalgesic effect when touching PARO. We show that human-robot social touch is effective in reducing pain ratings, improving mood and - surprisingly - reducing salivary oxytocin levels in adults.
Funder
Helmsley Charitable Trust, Marcus Endowment Fund, the Borten Family Foundation grants, the Israel Pain Association, the Rosetrees Trust, Consolidated Anti-Aging Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference117 articles.
1. Berscheid, E. The human’s greatest strength: Other humans., 37–47 (American Psychological Association, 2003).
2. Frank, D. A., Klass, P. E., Earls, F. & Eisenberg, L. Infants and young children in orphanages: One view from pediatrics and child psychiatry. Pediatrics 97, 569–578 (1996).
3. Rutter, M. Maternal deprivation. Handbook of Parenting Volume 4 Social Conditions and Applied Parenting, 181 (2002).
4. Rutter, M. & O’connor, T. G. Are there biological programming effects for psychological development? Findings from a study of Romanian adoptees. Developmental psychology 40, 81 (2004).
5. Thompson, R. A. Social support and child protection: Lessons learned and learning. Child Abuse & Neglect 41, 19–29 (2015).
Cited by
71 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献