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1.
Pain ; 164(12): 2665-2674, 2023 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37678245

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT: Pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience. Both pain and emotions are warning signals against outside harm. Interoception, bodily sensations of emotions can be assessed with the emBODY tool where participants colour the body parts where they feel different emotions. Bodily maps of emotions (BMoE) have been shown to be similar between healthy individuals independent of age, sex, cultural background, and language. We used this tool to analyze how these body maps may differ between healthy controls and patients with persistent pain. We recruited 118 patients with chronic pain. An algorithm-selected matched controls from 2348 individuals who were recruited through social media, message boards, and student mailing lists. After providing background information, the participants completed the bodily topography colouring tasks with the emBODY tool using tablets (patients) and online using their own devices (controls), for pain, sensitivity for tactile, nociceptive and hedonic stimuli, and for the 6 basic emotions and a neutral state. Patients with pain coloured significantly larger areas for pain and more negative emotions. On the whole, their BMoEs were dampened compared with healthy controls. They also coloured more areas for nociceptive but not for tactile or hedonic sensitivity. Patients and controls marked different body areas as sensitive to nociceptive and tactile stimulation, but there was no difference in sensitivity to hedonic touch. Our findings suggest that emotional processing changes when pain persists, and this can be assessed with these colouring tasks. BMoEs may offer a new approach to assessing pain.


Subject(s)
Chronic Pain , Touch Perception , Humans , Touch , Emotions/physiology , Culture
3.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 7555, 2023 05 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37160953

ABSTRACT

The high incidence rates of basal cell carcinoma (BCC) cause a significant burden at pathology laboratories. The standard diagnostic process is time-consuming and prone to inter-pathologist variability. Despite the application of deep learning approaches in grading of other cancer types, there is limited literature on the application of vision transformers to BCC on whole slide images (WSIs). A total of 1832 WSIs from 479 BCCs, divided into training and validation (1435 WSIs from 369 BCCs) and testing (397 WSIs from 110 BCCs) sets, were weakly annotated into four aggressivity subtypes. We used a combination of a graph neural network and vision transformer to (1) detect the presence of tumor (two classes), (2) classify the tumor into low and high-risk subtypes (three classes), and (3) classify four aggressivity subtypes (five classes). Using an ensemble model comprised of the models from cross-validation, accuracies of 93.5%, 86.4%, and 72% were achieved on two, three, and five class classifications, respectively. These results show high accuracy in both tumor detection and grading of BCCs. The use of automated WSI analysis could increase workflow efficiency.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Basal Cell , Skin Neoplasms , Humans , Carcinoma, Basal Cell/diagnostic imaging , Electric Power Supplies , Laboratories , Neural Networks, Computer , Skin Neoplasms/diagnosis
4.
Neuroscience ; 464: 105-116, 2021 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32931848

ABSTRACT

Humans use touch to maintain their social relationships, and the emotional qualities of touch depend on who touches whom. However, it is not known how affective and social dimensions of touch are processed in the brain. We measured haemodynamic brain activity with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) from 19 subjects (10 males), while they were touched on their upper thigh by either their romantic partner, or an unfamiliar female or male confederate or saw the hand of one of these individuals near their upper thigh but were not touched. We used multi-voxel pattern analysis on pre-defined regions of interest to reveal areas that encode social touch in a relationship-specific manner. The accuracy of the machine learning classifier to identify actor for both feeling touch and seeing hand exceeded the chance level in the primary somatosensory cortex, while in the insular cortex accuracy was above chance level only for the touch condition. When classifying the relationship (partner or stranger), while keeping the toucher sex fixed, amygdala (AMYG), orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), and primary and secondary somatosensory cortices were able to discriminate toucher significantly above chance level. These results suggest that information on the social relationship of the toucher is processed consistently across several regions. More complex information about toucher identity is processed in the primary somatosensory and insular cortices, both of which can be considered early sensory areas.


Subject(s)
Touch Perception , Touch , Brain Mapping , Cerebral Cortex , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Physical Stimulation , Somatosensory Cortex
5.
Proc Biol Sci ; 286(1901): 20190467, 2019 04 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31014213

ABSTRACT

Many species use touching for reinforcing social structures, and particularly, non-human primates use social grooming for managing their social networks. However, it is still unclear how social touch contributes to the maintenance and reinforcement of human social networks. Human studies in Western cultures suggest that the body locations where touch is allowed are associated with the strength of the emotional bond between the person touched and the toucher. However, it is unknown to what extent this relationship is culturally universal and generalizes to non-Western cultures. Here, we compared relationship-specific, bodily touch allowance maps across one Western ( N = 386, UK) and one East Asian ( N = 255, Japan) country. In both cultures, the strength of the emotional bond was linearly associated with permissible touch area. However, Western participants experienced social touching as more pleasurable than Asian participants. These results indicate a similarity of emotional bonding via social touch between East Asian and Western cultures.


Subject(s)
Cross-Cultural Comparison , Touch , Adult , Female , Humans , Japan , Male , Middle Aged , Object Attachment , Social Behavior , United Kingdom
6.
Arch Sex Behav ; 45(5): 1207-16, 2016 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27091187

ABSTRACT

Touching is a powerful means for eliciting sexual arousal. Here, we establish the topographical organization of bodily regions triggering sexual arousal in humans. A total of 704 participants were shown images of same and opposite sex bodies and asked to color the bodily regions whose touching they or members of the opposite sex would experience as sexually arousing while masturbating or having sex with a partner. Resulting erogenous zone maps (EZMs) revealed that the whole body was sensitive to sexual touching, with erogenous hotspots consisting of genitals, breasts, and anus. The EZM area was larger while having sex with a partner versus while masturbating, and was also dependent on sexual desire and heterosexual and homosexual interest levels. We conclude that tactile stimulation of practically all bodily regions may trigger sexual arousal. Extension of the erogenous zones while having sex with a partner may reflect the role of touching in maintenance of reproductive pair bonds.


Subject(s)
Libido/physiology , Sexual Behavior/physiology , Sexual Partners/psychology , Touch/physiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Young Adult
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(45): 13811-6, 2015 Nov 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26504228

ABSTRACT

Nonhuman primates use social touch for maintenance and reinforcement of social structures, yet the role of social touch in human bonding in different reproductive, affiliative, and kinship-based relationships remains unresolved. Here we reveal quantified, relationship-specific maps of bodily regions where social touch is allowed in a large cross-cultural dataset (N = 1,368 from Finland, France, Italy, Russia, and the United Kingdom). Participants were shown front and back silhouettes of human bodies with a word denoting one member of their social network. They were asked to color, on separate trials, the bodily regions where each individual in their social network would be allowed to touch them. Across all tested cultures, the total bodily area where touching was allowed was linearly dependent (mean r(2) = 0.54) on the emotional bond with the toucher, but independent of when that person was last encountered. Close acquaintances and family members were touched for more reasons than less familiar individuals. The bodily area others are allowed to touch thus represented, in a parametric fashion, the strength of the relationship-specific emotional bond. We propose that the spatial patterns of human social touch reflect an important mechanism supporting the maintenance of social bonds.


Subject(s)
Handling, Psychological , Interpersonal Relations , Object Attachment , Touch , Adult , Anatomic Landmarks , Europe , Female , Humans , Male , Regression Analysis , Self Report
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