Touching: The Human Significance of the SkinWith more than 300,000 copies sold, this landmark book is an impressive examination of the importance of touching. "All professionals concerned with human behavior will find something of value. . . . Parents . . . can gain insight into the nurturing needs of infants."--Janet Rhoads, American Journal of Occupational Therapy |
Contents
47 | |
Breastfeeding | 69 |
Tender Loving Care | 96 |
The Physiological Effects of Touching | 198 |
Growth and Development | 237 |
Culture and Contact | 292 |
Touch and Age | 393 |
The Effects upon the Mother of Removal | 412 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
activity adult Aivilik American animals Ashley Montagu autistic baby baby's become birth body contact brain breastfeeding C. C. Brown caressing child childhood colostrum communication cradle cuddling culture cutaneous stimulation early effects emotional ence environment Eskimo evidence fant feel female fetus fingers functions gentle gestation girls growth hand handled haptic HARLOW human infant important involved Journal kinesic licking lips male mammals Maternal Behavior maternally deprived ment milk monkeys mother Neonatal newborn nipple normal nursing observed organ parents patients percent period person physical contact physiological play pleasure postcentral gyrus postnatal premature Psychology pups rats received relation relationship response Rhesus Monkeys rocking sense sensitive sensory sensory receptors sexual skin sleep social stroking sucking suckling suggest tactile experience tactile stimulation tactual Tasaday therapeutic touch tion University Press uterus visual waterbed Western world womb women York young