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Pleasure fibres help with bonding

Nerve fibres in the skin that transmit pleasure messages to the brain have been identified by scientists, who said their findings may improve understanding of how touch sustains human relationships.

Along with identifying these "C-tactile" nerve fibres, the researchers also found that a person's skin must be stroked at a certain rate - four to five centimetres per second - to activate the pleasure sensation, BBC News reported.

If the stroke rate was faster or slower, the nerve fibres weren't activated, and the touch wasn't pleasurable, according to the study of 20 people. It also found that C-tactile fibres are only present on hairy skin and are not found on the hand. The findings were published in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

The preferred stroke rate is the same as that used by a mother to comfort a baby, or by couples when they're showing affection, BBC News reported. These nerve fibres are part of the evolutionary mechanism that helps humans bond, said study author Professor Francis McGlone.

"Our primary impulse as humans is procreation, but there are some mechanisms in place that are associated with behaviour and reward which are there to ensure relationships continue," McGlone said. – (HealthDay News, April 2009)

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