Daily physical touch from a romantic partner enhances well-being, particularly among those with attachment anxiety

Authored by psypost.org and submitted by mvea
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New research suggests that being on the receiving end of intimate touch from a partner improves relational well-being in ways that giving intimate touch may not. The findings were published in Social Psychological and Personality Science.

The field of psychology has long contended that simple, human touch offers many benefits, such as reducing stress, providing feelings of comfort, improving physical health, and supporting brain development. In adults, touch within the context of intimate relationships has been studied as an important component of relationship satisfaction.

Study authors Cheryl L. Carmichael and team were motivated to investigate whether adult attachments styles would be associated with different touch preferences and different responses to touch from a romantic partner.

In an initial study, 323 non-single adults completed a scale designed to assess their attachment styles. The scale measured attachment anxiety — defined by fears of being alone and a dependency on the affection of others, and attachment avoidance — defined as an aversion to closeness and a preference for independence. The subjects also answered questions concerning 12 touch behaviors (e.g., cuddling, holding hands, kissing).

As the researchers expected, those who were higher in anxious attachment had a greater desire for touch behaviors, engaged in them more often, were more likely to initiate them, and felt they were more important to a relationship. Those who were more avoidant, however, displayed the opposite pattern for all five of these ratings.

To investigate how these associations would play out in the context of everyday behavior, the researchers next conducted a 10-day diary study. Here, 115 individuals kept a daily log of the touch behaviors they received from their partners and those they provided to their partners. They also completed several measures related to relationship well-being.

As the researchers expected, being avoidantly attached was linked to providing less daily touch to a romantic partner. Being anxiously attached, however, was unrelated to daily touch provided to partners.

Interestingly, being on the receiving end of touch behaviors offered unique benefits compared to initiating touch. Initiating touch behaviors was linked to greater relationship quality, closeness, and willingness to accommodate one’s partner. Receiving touch behaviors was also linked to these three benefits, but was uniquely linked to greater ratings of partner responsiveness.

This finding, the researchers say, indicates that “although giving and receiving touch both benefit a relationship in some ways (e.g., satisfaction, closeness), only receiving touch can promote feelings of understanding, validation, and care.”

As it turns out, attachment styles were found to influence the extent that participants benefitted from touch behaviors. Importantly, these benefits were strongest among those with anxious attachment, who were perhaps more tuned into their partner’s demonstrations of touch. Surprisingly, avoidant attachment was not associated with a decreased benefit from touch behaviors, something the researchers call an “interesting paradox” given that these avoidant participants reported less desire for these behaviors.

The studies were limited due to a reliance on self-reports of touch behavior, which may be biased. Still, the findings suggest that both receiving and providing touch has strong benefits for couples, especially those with attachment styles characterized by fearfulness and dependency.

The study, “Security-Based Differences in Touch Behavior and Its Relational Benefits”, was authored by Cheryl L. Carmichael, Matthew H. Goldberg, and Maureen A. Coyle.

account_for_norm on November 22nd, 2020 at 07:43 UTC »

Does a dogs touch matter? It must, coz my mental health has improved through the roof since i got my pup.

gordonjames62 on November 22nd, 2020 at 05:00 UTC »

I am a happily married husband, who initiates most touching.

I have a few thoughts on this.

[1] COVID lockdown would be so much worse without a partner because our world has become much less open to (formerly) normal levels of contact like handshakes and high fives.

[2] The difference between initiating and receiving touch is a new concept for me. That was helpful research.

[3] Initiating always has the possibility of being passively ignored or actively rebuffed. There is a risk involved.

mvea on November 21st, 2020 at 23:25 UTC »

The post title is from the linked academic press release here:

Daily physical touch from a romantic partner enhances well-being, particularly among those with attachment anxiety

Interestingly, being on the receiving end of touch behaviors offered unique benefits compared to initiating touch.

The source journal article is here:

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1948550620929164

Security-Based Differences in Touch Behavior and Its Relational Benefits

Cheryl L. Carmichael, Matthew H. Goldberg, Maureen A. Coyle

Social Psychological and Personality Science

First Published June 18, 2020

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1948550620929164

Abstract

Affectionate touch is crucial to the development of attachment security in infancy, yet little is known about how attachment and touch are related in adulthood. For adults high in anxiety, touch provision can maintain proximity, and received touch can signal reassurance of a partner’s affections that relatively anxious people desperately desire. Adults high in avoidance likely view touch as a threat to independence, should be less inclined to provide touch, and may perceive received touch as intrusive. In two studies, we demonstrated that attachment anxiety was associated with positive feelings about touch but unrelated to daily touch provision. However, the benefits associated with daily received touch were amplified among people higher in anxiety. Conversely, attachment avoidance was associated with negative feelings about touch, and reductions in daily touch provision, but did not moderate the benefits associated with received touch.