There are still many mysteries to Asperger’s Syndrome: Marian Sigman and Lisa M. Capps,
as revealed in the brilliant essay by music critic Tim Page: T. Page, “Parallel Play: A Lifetime of Restless Isolation Explained,”
And teasing: E. A. Heerey et al., “Understanding Teasing: Lessons from Children with Autism,”
TOUCH
For the past fifteen years: mind and life dialogues, www.mindandlife.org.
the Dalai Lama has been engaging: His Holiness the Dalai Lama, “Understanding Our Fundamental Nature,” in
an answer is found in the contagious goodness hypothesis: I summarize these ideas in greater detail elsewhere. D. Keltner, “The Compassionate Instinct,”
Desmond Morris’s famous phrasing: Desmond Morris,
As Nina Jablonski has argued: Jablonski,
several functions essential to human survival: For an outstanding summary of the function of the skin, see ibid.
we learned to signal different objects and states with what are known as emblems: For one of the first taxonomies of expressive behavior, including gestures, see Ekman and Friesen, “The Repertoire of Nonverbal Behavior: Categories, Origins, Usage and Coding,”
The progenitor of this view: Rolls,
in one study participants received a fifteen-minute Swedish massage: R. A. Turner et al., “Preliminary Research on Plasma Oxytocin in Normal Cycling Women: Investigating Emotion and Interpersonal Distress,”
Other studies have found that massage: For a terrific summary of all facets of touch, see Tiffany Field,
Recent studies have found that rat mothers: D. Francis and M. J. Meaney, “Maternal Care and the Development of Stress Responses,”
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that is involved in the pursuit of rewards: A. G. Phillips et al., “Neurobiological Correlates of Positive Emotional States: Dopamine, Anticipation, and Reward,” in
the benefits of touching are not limited to rat pups: For a comprehensive review of the dozens of studies of touch therapies, and the benefits they bring to premature babies, people suffering from depression, and ailments during aging, see Field,
when teachers are randomly assigned to touch some of their students and not others: D. C. Aguilera, “Relationship between Physical Contact and Verbal Interaction between Nurses and Patients,
In her excellent book: Field,
mortality rates for infants: Ibid.
In a more systematic comparison: R. Spitz, “Hospitalism,”
Tiffany Field has found that massages given to premature babies lead, on average, to a 47 percent increase in weight gain: Field reviews several studies, including those from her lab, which replicate this important finding. Field,