Parenting Hack: Activate Your Child's C-Tactile Fibers
Neuroscience research that can actually help in your day-to-day parenting
In today’s newsletter, I want to share a research finding from neuroscience that is actually very relevant to your day-to-day parenting. It may seem complex at first but stick with me here… I promise that the takeaway message is simple!
Source: Glatte, Buchmann, Hijazi, Illigens, & Siepmann, 2019
Parenting Hack #2: Activate Your Child’s C-Tactile Fibers
C-Tactile fibers are special nerves in our skin that are tuned for sensing affectionate touch and transmitting this sensation to the brain. Research finds that the type of touch that parents naturally use (gentle, light stroking at a specific rate) seems to optimally activate the C-Tactile fibers. Specifically, one experiment found that parents naturally stroke their children at the exact rate that optimally activates C-Tactile fibers yet use a different rate when stroking an artificial arm. Interestingly, even babies show a sensitivity to the slow, gentle touch that activates C-tactile fibers. C-Tactile fibers are especially responsive to the exact temperate of human skin, suggesting that these pathways were built specifically for human physical affection. In other words, our brains and nervous systems are literally wired for physical affection.
Source: Croy, Fairhurst, & McGlone, 2022
Why Are C-Tactile Fibers Important?
So why is affectionate touch so important that it deserves its own pathway to the brain? When C-tactile fibers are optimally activated, regions of the brain involved in social bonding and reward are activated (see the image above). This means that the touch is perceived as more pleasant and rewarding and may motivate children to bond with their caregivers and pay attention to and learn from those around them.
Other lines of research also find that affectionate touch is critical for healthy brain development. Researchers observed mothers with their five-year-old children during play and found that mothers who touched their children more during play had children with greater connectivity among brain regions involved in social and emotional development. These findings suggest that touch is important in developing a “social brain.” In line with these findings, research also finds that affectionate touch in childhood is associated with enhanced social and moral development and improved well-being later in life. These effects seem to be long-lasting. Research finds that a high level of affection in the first year of life is associated with less stress and anxiety as an adult.
How Can I Use This Information to Make Everyday Parenting Easier?
So you might be thinking: “Okay, okay… it seems like C-tactile fibers and affectionate touch are important for social-emotional development, but how can I use this information to help me parent today?” Research finds that you may be able to use this type of affectionate touch to calm your child down when they are upset, to reduce their stress in challenging situations, and even to decrease pain during a painful medical procedure or injury. Research finds that activation of the C-Tactile fibers may lower heart rate, lead to more positive emotions, and reduce pain responses. So next time your child is upset, try using this type of slow and gentle touch to help them to feel better!
How Exactly Do You Activate C-Tactile Fibers?
So affectionate touch is clearly important, how exactly do you activate C-Tactile fibers so that your child perceives your touch as pleasant and rewarding? Research provides some insight here:
Use slow, light touch: Research finds that a slow and gentle touch should optimally activate this pathway and this type of touch rated as more pleasant by children.
Focus on the back, arms, legs, and face: C-Tactile fibers are most concentrated in the skin covered in fine hair such as the back, arms, legs, and face (as compared to the palm of the hand or the bottom of the foot, which are relatively hairless). It may seem like a strange suggestion but you may want to focus more on these “hairy” regions if you want to activate these special nerve fibers. In particular, the arms and face seem to have a lot of C-Tactile fibers.
Use skin-to-skin contact: C-Tactile fibers are most responsive to human skin temperature so remember to use skin-to-skin contact whenever possible, particularly with newborn babies.
Start from birth: Research finds that this pathway is functioning in 2-month-old infants so it is never too early to start.
How can you increase the amount of physical affection you give to your child?
Even for the most affectionate parents, it is easy to fall out of the habit of providing regular physical affection to your child. It would clearly seem very odd if you started randomly stroking your children because you think it’s somehow good for their brain development. So how can you increase the amount of physical affection you give your child in a way that naturally fits into your day-to-day life as a parent?
Try to incorporate touch into your daily routine. For example, cuddle in bed when your child wakes up in the morning or before they go to bed at night, spend extra time washing their hair or body in the bath, have a goodbye ritual that involves hugging or kissing, or stroke their arm while reading them books at night.
Find new ways to give your child physical affection. With infants, you can wear them in a sling or carrier (try a skin-to-skin carrier like this one for the added benefit of skin-to-skin contact) or use infant massage (see here for a simple guide to infant massage). You can also hold, cuddle, touch, stroke, rock, and kiss them. As children get older, try to find new ways to offer physical affection. Turn affection into a game by being a “snuggle monster” or giving them a “kiss attack.” Even wrestling and roughhousing often involves physical touch.
When your child is sad, frustrated, scared, or experiencing any challenging emotion, provide physical comfort by stroking their back, arms, or face. The research described above suggests that activating C-tactile fibers may help them to calm down more quickly.
Give physical affection when praising your child or even when disciplining them. This small act will make both positive and negative attention from you more powerful.
But some kids and parents DON’T enjoy physical affection…
It is important to note that some parents find physical affection difficult due to a trauma history, a lack of physical affection in their own childhood, sensory sensitivities, or other factors. Children with autism and other neurodiverse children, as well as children with a trauma history, also may not enjoy physical affection to the same extent or may prefer a different type of physical affection.
If this is the case for you or your child, try to show your child affection in a way that works for both you and your child. You can try using non-physical approaches, including loving words and gestures or simply pay special attention to your child. If your child is old enough, have an ongoing conversation about how they like to show and receive love.
OVERALL TRANSLATION
Affectionate touch may help to improve the parent-child bond, build your child’s “social brain,” calm them down, and even reduce pain. You can try to make affectionate touch more pleasant and rewarding for children by activating their C-Tactile fibers through slow and gentle touch. However, if physical affection does not work for you and/or your child, know that you can find other ways to show love and affection.
ONE LAST NOTE
In scientific research, we have a process called “peer review,” which means that all research is reviewed by experts before it is published. Similarly, all Parenting Translator newsletters will be “peer-reviewed” meaning I have a team of consultants that will review the newsletters to make sure they are accurate, unbiased, clearly written, and as helpful as possible for you as a parent.
Today’s newsletter was reviewed by Dr. Jillian Sullivan. Dr. Jillian Sullivan received a PhD in Developmental Psychiatry at the University of Cambridge in the UK. Her research focused on how brain development impacts child behavior (and she earned the very prestigious Gates Cambridge scholarship to support this work). She has also conducted research on the biology of parent-child relationships and sensory processing differences in kids. She is now the Lead Evaluation and Data Specialist at a non-profit focused on increasing social-emotional and literacy skills in early education. I asked Dr. Sullivan to serve as a consultant for Parenting Translator since she brings expertise on attachment, brain development, sensory differences, early childhood education, and translating research into the real world.
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Welcome to the Parenting Translator newsletter! I am Dr. Cara Goodwin, a licensed psychologist with a PhD in child psychology and mother to three children (currently an almost-2-year-old, 4-year-old, and 6-year-old). I specialize in taking all of the research that is out there related to parenting and child development and turning it into information that is accurate, relevant, and useful for parents! I recently turned these efforts into a non-profit organization since I believe that all parents deserve access to unbiased and free information. This means that I am only here to help YOU as a parent so please send along any feedback, topic suggestions, or questions that you have! You can also find me on Instagram @parentingtranslator, on TikTok @parentingtranslator, and my website (www.parentingtranslator.com).
DISCLAIMER: The information and advice in this newsletter is for educational purposes only and is not intended or implied to be a substitute for professional medical, mental health, legal, or other professions. Call your medical, mental health professional, or 911 for all emergencies. Dr. Cara Goodwin is not liable for any advice or information provided in this newsletter.