The curious thing about a tickle (2024)

September 20th, 2022

Written by: Barnes Jannuzi

You can be tickled, and you can tickle others, but you can’t tickle yourself. Researchers have demonstrated that self-produced tickles are less tickling than the same action performed by someone else2,4. You probably didn’t need a journal article to tell you that, because you likely learned it as a child. But why can’t you tickle yourself? The reason is that you are both the tickler and the tickled. More specifically, your brain is responsible for both the movement of your body and the perception of touch, allowing it to predict and ignore the feeling of being self-tickled. Your inability to tickle yourself comes down to how your brain processes sensory information and plans/executes movements.

Let’s begin with what is going on in the brain during a real-world example: you are the evil tickler of your poor younger sibling. Like any voluntary movement, regions of your brain develop a “motor plan” and send that plan down your spinal cord to the muscles in your arm and hand. You can think of this like a brain-GPS navigation system, directing your muscles on how to get your body to where you want it. These signals are precisely timed and work together to carry out the complex task of moving your arm forward, angling your wrist, and wiggling your fingers in just the right way to tickle your sibling. This seemingly simple task is truly remarkable in how accurately your nervous system has to function to pull it off correctly, but equally impressive is a process going on behind the scenes in your brain called sensorimotor prediction1.

At the same time as the motor plan is shooting down your spine, a copy of that plan is being sent to other regions of your brain such as the cerebellum, a region thought to play an important role in motor coordination3. The cerebellum also receives sensory updates from your body about where your hand actually is. Then the cerebellum can compare the real position with the motor plan to make sure that your hand physically reached your sibling’s foot, executed the tickling movement, and can correct the actions if needed. In other words, “Did your body follow the brain-GPS instructions? Or is there some correction that you need to make because you missed your turn?” Unsurprisingly, this circuit is not only working when you want to tickle someone, but around the clock, giving your brain an amazing ability to accurately maneuver your body, and correct for any errors by monitoring the sensory information sent from your body up to your brain.

Now that we have discussed the movement of your body, let’s talk about the second half of your self-tickling conundrum: the perception of touch. There are many sensors in your nervous system, each specialized to detect something about the outside world. The enormous amount of sensory information bombarding your brain is potentially overwhelming- but not all sensory information is equally important. In fact, most sensory signals from your body are ignored by your brain. In what scientists call “sensory gating” (which you can read more about in this previous post), your brain filters out irrelevant sensory information to allow you to focus on what is relevant.

As an example of sensory gating, as you read this article, pause for a moment and shift how you are seated. Now do it again, only this time, try to pay closer attention to the feeling of your clothes shifting/pressing against your body. Even when you are sitting perfectly still, your body is still being touched and senses the clothes you are wearing, the glasses on the ridge of your nose, the airpods in your ears, the hairband on your head. But when it comes to your normal activities, you barely notice all of these senses because you often don’t need to. By ignoring these irrelevant senses, your brain is prioritizing new and unexpected information to help you understand and interact with your world.

To summarize why you can’t tickle yourself: Your brain is too smart to be fooled. Your brain not only plans out your movements, but also predicts what you will feel as a result of those movements, allowing it to ignore these predicted sensations and focus on the new and unexpected. Understanding how your brain accomplishes simple functions allows you to not only build a fundamental understanding of yourself, but may also inform medical interventions to help those with sensory-motor deficiencies who are having trouble navigating with their brain-GPS. While this self-tickling conundrum may not be on the top ten of life’s mysteries, nor humanities problems, it serves as an example of how the simplest and silliest questions may be a window into the remarkable functions brains do to help us perceive the world around us… often without us paying attention to it.

References

  1. Wolpert, D. M., Ghahramani, Z., & Jordan, M. I. (1995). An Internal Model for Sensorimotor Integration. Science, 269(5232), 1880–1882. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2889276
  2. Blakemore, SJ., Wolpert, D. & Frith, C. Central cancellation of self-produced tickle sensation. Nat Neurosci 1, 635–640 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1038/2870
  3. Blakemore, SJ., Sirigu, A. Action prediction in the cerebellum and in the parietal lobe. Exp Brain Res 153, 239–245 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-003-1597-z
  4. Blakemore SJ, Wolpert D, Frith C. Why can’t you tickle yourself? Neuroreport. 2000 Aug 3;11(11):R11-6. doi: 10.1097/00001756-200008030-00002. PMID: 10943682.

Cover image by Ketut Subiyanto on Pexels

The curious thing about a tickle (2024)

FAQs

What are some interesting facts about tickling? ›

When someone tickles you, the cerebellum reacts to this unexpected touch. Our brain is aware of our body's movement however and can predict a response to any sensation and suppress a response. This failure to surprise our brain is why we cannot tickle ourselves. A reaction to being tickled does have benefits.

What is the response to being tickled? ›

Tickling results from a mild stimulation moving across the skin, and is associated with behaviors such as smiling, laughter, twitching, withdrawal and goose bumps. The tickle can be divided into two separate categories of sensation, knismesis and gargalesis.

What happens if you get tickled too long? ›

Depending on its intensity and duration, tickling can, in fact, lead to death from asphyxia, brain aneurysms, or other stress-related injuries, as people are unable to regulate their breathing under the stress of tickling. In essence, what is 'fun and games' for one, may cause panic attacks for another.

Why can't we tickle ourselves? The answer to the question is assumed to be? ›

The reason you can't tickle yourself is that when you move a part of your own body, a part of your brain monitors the movement and anticipates the sensations that it will cause.

Why is tickling good for you? ›

May aid in weight management: Tickling involves a lot of muscle twitching and laughter, which can burn calories. Studies suggest that around 10-15 minutes of laughter can burn up to 40 calories. Besides burning calories, a good laugh also helps you feel relaxed and rejuvenated.

Can you go to jail for tickling someone? ›

Things you didn't know are illegal. Tickling someone without their consent. is seen as a form of assault. Duly noted. Imagine just joking around and tickling someone, and you end up going to jail.

Is tickling a form of love? ›

Tickling—Some individuals may not like to be tickled, but tickling is a physical expression of love.

Why shouldn't you tickle babies' feet? ›

Tickling baby feet can simulate being held down, touched, or violated without consent, which can be highly triggering and traumatic for some children. Even if tickling baby feet is done with good intentions and no harm intended, it can still cause emotional distress and flashbacks.

Where is the only place you can tickle yourself? ›

Tickle the roof of your mouth with your tongue.

Lightly rotate your tongue in a circle on the roof of your mouth to create a tickling sensation. No one is entirely sure why this method works, since the areas of our brain that process sensation are less active when self-tickling.

Why do people hate being tickled? ›

Tickling stimulates pain and panic

According to research conducted at the University of Tübingen in 2013, tickling another person activates the areas of the brain responsible for feeling pain and the "fight or flight" response.

Can you tickle a dog? ›

Some dogs are ticklish on their ears, neck, or back.” Like humans, tickle spots vary from dog to dog. Some are highly sensitive, and some may yawn as if they're bored with the test. If you're trying to elicit a response, common spots include the paws and the base of the tail.

What was tickling originally used for? ›

Tickling was used as a torture by the ancient Romans. Tickling is used in sexual fetishism where it is known as "tickle torture". Research by Dr Sarah-Jayne Blakemore of the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience in London found that robotic arms used to tickle people are just as effective as human arms.

What does tickling do to you? ›

During a tickle, the skin's nerve endings shoot electrical signals to the somatosensory cortex, a part of the brain that processes touch. Meanwhile, the anterior cingulate cortex analyzes these signals as either harmful or playful. But in the back part of the brain, the cerebellum gives you away.

How rare is tickling yourself? ›

2% of the world can tickle themselves. That means that just because you can tickle yourself doesn't mean you're schizophrenic. According to research, schizophrenic people can tickle themselves, but not all people who can tickle themselves are schizophrenic.

How to make tickling fun? ›

Ask your victim if they want to be tied up.

Some people therefore find it to be sexual turn-on. If you both are game, tying up your victim will leave them fully exposed and prevent them from retaliating, running, or defending their tickle spots, making the tickling more intense. Tie them up to a chair, for example.

References

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