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Touch: The Science of Hand, Heart, and Mind Hardcover – 29 Jan 2015

3.1 out of 5 stars 9 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Viking; 1 edition (29 Jan. 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0670014877
  • ISBN-13: 978-0670014873
  • Product Dimensions: 15.9 x 2.3 x 23.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,701,581 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

Reviews
"The sensation of touch, so ubiquitous in how we interact with our world, gets a sensualist pop-biology treatment . . . . His exploration of the relationship between the things we feel with our fingertips and those we feel in our hearts begins with social touch and its lasting effects on babies and rats. Linden covers the basics of tactile receptor types and sensory maps before diving into several chapters--all appropriately science-based, yet somehow slightly lurid and intimate--on caresses, sexual arousal, and orgasm . . . . Linden sandwiches a surprising amount of anatomical information between the stories of bad hand jobs and children who die young because they can't feel pain."
--"Publishers Weekly"

Reviews
"The sensation of touch, so ubiquitous in how we interact with our world, gets a sensualist pop-biology treatment . . . . His exploration of the relationship between the things we feel with our fingertips and those we feel in our hearts begins with social touch and its lasting effects on babies and rats. Linden covers the basics of tactile receptor types and sensory maps before diving into several chapters--all appropriately science-based, yet somehow slightly lurid and intimate--on caresses, sexual arousal, and orgasm . . . . Linden sandwiches a surprising amount of anatomical information between the stories of bad hand jobs and children who die young because they can't feel pain."
--"Publishers Weekly"

"The sensation of touch, so ubiquitous in how we interact with our world, gets a sensualist pop-biology treatment. . . . His exploration of the relationship between the things we feel with our fingertips and those we feel in our hearts begins with social touch and its lasting effects on babies and rats. Linden covers the basics of tactile receptor types and sensory maps before diving into several chapters--all appropriately science-based, yet somehow slightly lurid and intimate--on caresses, sexual arousal, and orgasm. . . . Linden sandwiches a surprising amount of anatomical information between the stories of bad hand jobs and children who die young because they can't feel pain."
--"Publishers Weekly"

[Linden is] an able guide to the world of touch, with a true gift for simplifying the complex . Touch may not have the same glamour as sight or taste, but, Linden argues, it s a crucial form of social glue and a central aspect of our human experience. "Touch"the book, will make you think more deeply about every itch, scrape and caress.
"The Washington Post"
"Touch "is a treasure trove for anyone wanting to decode the frisson of a lover s caress.
"Playboy"
With a novelist s flair for anecdote, Linden unpacks the science behind touch by revealing how the sense informs and motivates us in everyday situations.
"The Scientist"
""
A crisp reminder that the sense of touch is not to be taken lightly . . . So surpassing does Linden make touch seem that even turning the pages of his book becomes a pleasurable experience.
"Kirkus Reviews"
This in-depth, awareness-raising discussion of the effects of touch from head to toe and back again sheds light on a fascinating yet overlooked topic.
" Booklist"
The sensation of touch, so ubiquitous in how we interact with our world, gets a sensualist pop-biology treatment. . . . His exploration of the relationship between the things we feel with our fingertips and those we feel in our hearts begins with social touch and its lasting effects on babies and rats. Linden covers the basics of tactile receptor types and sensory maps before diving into several chapters all appropriately science-based, yet somehow slightly lurid and intimate on caresses, sexual arousal, and orgasm. . . . Linden sandwiches a surprising amount of anatomical information between the stories of bad hand jobs and children who die young because they can t feel pain.
"Publishers Weekly""

[Linden is] an able guide to the world of touch, with a true gift for simplifying the complex. (The illustrations and diagrams throughout the book help, too.) The book is packed with cocktail-party trivia scientists believe that touch is the first sense to develop in utero; some people with schizophrenia can tickle themselves and satisfying explanations of everyday tactile experiences.
Emily Anthes, "The Washington Post"
With a novelist s flair for anecdote, Linden unpacks the science behind touch by revealing how the sense informs and motivates us in everyday situations.
Bob Grant, "The Scientist"
A book for the non-expert on the neuroscience of touch is very welcome, and I recommend this one enthusiastically. It's full of facts and explanations, many of which are totally cool and, some, even astonishing . . . . But what endears me to the book is not its clarity and its informativeness. What I love is its openness, and occasional insightfulness, about all the things we don't know.
Alva Noe, " "NPR.org s "13.7: Cosmos & Culture "blog
"Touch: The Science of Hand, Heart and Mind," is a treasure trove for anyone wanting to decode the frisson of a lover s caress. After all, the skin, says Linden, is a social organ.
Cat Auer, "Playboy"
The best science writers infect you with their fascination for the subject that s exactly what Linden achieves here.
Christian Jarrett, "BBC Focus"
This book is about the sense of touch, it s by a professor of neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, and it s excellent. It will tell you why footballers hug each other when a goal is scored, why they are like vampire bats in this respect, and why some people like being the recipients of anal sex while others don t. David Linden tells us all of this with exactly the right degree of scientific dryness.
William Leith, "The Spectator (UK)"
Linden explores touch in depth, from itches to orgasms . . . and it makes for compelling reading.
Orlando Bird, " Financial Times"
Being out of touch, the American neuroscientist David J Linden argues in his absorbing book, is not just something that happens to cabinet ministers . . . The human brain contains 500 billion nerve cells and does not give up its secrets lightly. But following Linden s thread is profoundly worth it.
Oliver Moody, "The Times" (London)
An engrossing book . . . This book has changed my own life in a small but significant way. My family joke that I m the woman who put the sal into salad as I ve spent my life grazing on uncooked veg. I now gulp down hot soup and feel the better for it. Thank you, David Linden.
Salley Vickers, " The Guardian"
David J. Linden s "Touch" is a charming read that explains the science of touch in easily understandable terms. Anyone who is interested in human interactions and emotional connections will find this book interesting. Just as important, men and women who deal with intimacy disorders including love and sex addiction are likely to find this book enlightening from a disease and recovery standpoint.
Scott Brassart, Addiction.com
The Johns Hopkins neuroscientist leads us on a delightful tour of the science of touch, sharing discoveries that shed new light on this highly under-appreciated sense.
Jill Suttie, "Greater Good"
If you re interested in the mechanics of your mind or you want to know why you itch and what you have in common with koalas, read this and you won t be disappointed. "Touch: The Science of Hand, Heart, and Mind" is a book to get your fingers on.
Terri Schlichenmeyer, "Rockdale Citizen"
The book is highly readable and laced with stories that are fascinating, funny and surprising!
Viviane Crystal, "The Best Reviews"
Though the author includes a host of entertaining anecdotes, his narrative is consistently backed by solid science. So surpassing does Linden make touch seem that even turning the pages of his book becomes a pleasurable experience.
"Kirkus Reviews"
Why does sexual touch feel good? What is the difference between being touched on one s palm or
shoulder? Of all the senses, touch is by far the most underrated, according to Johns Hopkins neuroscience professor Linden ("The Compass of Pleasure," 2011) . . . .This in-depth, awareness-raising discussion of the effects of touch from head to toe and back again sheds light on a fascinating yet overlooked topic.
Donna Chavez, "Booklist"
The sensation of touch, so ubiquitous in how we interact with our world, gets a sensualist pop-biology treatment from Linden ("The Compass of Pleasure"), a professor of neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Though it s not exactly a neurobiology primer, Linden sandwiches a surprising amount of anatomical information between the stories of bad hand jobs and children who die young because they can t feel pain.
" Publishers Weekly""

About the Author

DAVID J. LINDEN is a professor of neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the "New York Times "bestselling author of "The Compass of Pleasure" and "The Accidental Mind." He lives in Baltimore with his two children.


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Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
This book opens very well with an introductory chapter which tells you that touch matters: basketball teams do better the more the my touch, you'll get a better response from people if you touch them - lightly in the arm, and Latin Americans touch much more than Europeans, Americans or the British when having cups of coffee. Also there's kangaroo care of premature newborns and the importance of touch in parenting care. 180 times an hour in Puerto Rico. 110 times in Paris. Twice in Florida. Not at all in london...After that the book be comes rather more heavily scientific. It covers receptors in the skin (for working parking meters, for caress and in sex), for feeling hot and cold, for pain and for itching and scratching. A final chapter on illusion explains that touch is for making sense of the world rather than accurate representation.

I learned a fair but of interest in these later chapters - about Louis Braille, about a condition I hadn't heard of - PGAD, and about a woman who scratched her way through her skull and into her brain. I also learned there's still a lot we don't kmow about touch...but they were less consistently gripping than chapter one...

So I'd recommend this primarily if you want to learn about the science of touch. Otherwise I'd recommend reading chapter one then a few highlights of later chapters.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Really disappointing! I can't understand why this is getting such good reviews. The prologue simply does not introduce the book that follows. Much of what is signposted there is not elaborated on in the main text. The book veers wildly between titillating anecdotes and extremely dry, scientific detail giving the impression it's been written by a teenage boy who's swallowed a text book. Also frustrating is the number of times a section concludes with 'we simply do not know the answer to that question'. I am all for highlighting areas of potential future research, but in this case it just feels like being lead up the garden path.
It's a fascinating subject, but this book doesn't do it justice.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Not what I expected after review in the times
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Good coverage of the subject.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Don't know why i bought this.
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