When a student in a
University of Delaware study watched a video of someone elses hand
being touched, she felt the touch on her own hand. While that may seem a
little eerie to most of us, shes not alone. About two in 100 people
have this condition called mirror-touch synesthesia, or MTS.
In an article published in Cortex,
UD researchers reveal new information about MTS based on one of the
largest studies of its kind. The subject pool was more than 2,000
undergrads from multiple sections of an introductory psychology course
who volunteered as research participants over the past few years.
Some of the students in our study didnt know that what they were
experiencing was different from the rest of the population, and it blew
their minds, says Jared Medina, assistant professor in UDs Department
of Psychological and Brain Sciences. But if you have mirror-touch
synesthesia, theres nothing wrong with you. Its just an interesting
difference, like being double-jointed.
Carrie DePasquale led the screening process as part of her
undergraduate research at UD. She graduated from the University in 2015
with an honors bachelors degree in neuroscience and is working now on
her doctorate at the University of Minnesota.
Each student was tested sitting at a table with hands oriented either
palms up or palms down. Each was shown a series of videos of a hand
being touched, varying the location surface or palm, index or ring
finger, right hand or left hand and asked if they felt anything, where
the touch was felt and the strength of the sensation. A second
experiment tested reaction times to rule out if someone was faking it.
From the 2,351 undergraduates screened, 45 were identified to have MTS.
When I would debrief them, many would tell me about sensations they
felt while watching movies, DePasquale says. It was almost as if they
were a part of the movie feeling touch, pain and other physical
sensations that the characters were experiencing.
How similar were the responses of the 45 synesthetes to what they
actually saw? When the participants hands and the video hand had the
same posture all hands palms-up, for example the participants
frequently felt touch on the same surface stimulated in the video.
However, when the hands were in a different position (video hand
palms-down, participants hands palms-up), a different pattern emerged.
One group consistently felt phantom touch on their own hand surface
that was facing up regardless of the side touched in the video. The
other group always felt touch on the surface stimulated in the video
regardless of their own hand position.
These phantom sensations were more frequent when the participants
hand position matched the video hands. Our findings suggest that the
brain is matching the video hand to their own hand, as if asking could
that be my hand? Medina says.
The hands have a hefty region dedicated to them in the somatosensory
cortex the area of your brain that processes and maps inputs from the
multitude of neurons responsible for touch. The amount of processing
space taken up by the fingers in this brain region is almost equivalent
to the space devoted to the entire area extending from the forearms to
the mid-torso, Medina points out.
People with MTS map tactile data differently than the rest of us do,
but scientists dont yet know how. When most people view someone else
being touched, some somatosensory brain regions are active. These same
networks may be hyperactive in mirror-touch synesthetes, resulting in
them feeling touch viewed on someone elses body, Medina says.
Other forms of synesthesia exist, which some mirror-touch synesthetes
also may have, Medina says. Instead of the black text of this article,
they may see it in another color. Some may experience taste when seeing
another person eating or drinking.
Marilyn Monroe, Vladimir Nabokov and Vincent van Gogh are among a
growing list of famous people believed to have been synesthetes. Nobel
Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman saw the letters in equations in
different colors. Mary J. Blige, Billy Joel and Stevie Wonder are just a
few of the musicians who have said they experience music as colors.
In future research, Medina wants to use the fMRI in UDs new Center for Biomedical and Brain Imaging
as part of the testing. By measuring oxygenated blood flow, the
cutting-edge instrument can reveal what parts of the brain are most
active during a particular task or movement. Medina hopes it can be used
to understand brain function in those with MTS.
We often assume that sensory experience is standard that we all
see, hear and feel things the same way. But thats not the case. Our
brains are all wired a little differently, Medina says. Our research
is important for understanding variety in the human experience and how the mind works.
The work was funded by the National Science Foundation and the University of Delaware Research Foundation.
Article by Tracey Bryant; photo by Evan Krape