Quantifying the Interoceptive Fear–Laughter Response: A Restrained-Stimulus Protocol for Induced Tickle-Stress in Human Subjects
Derek, Principal Investigator | Fettish Psychophysiology Laboratory
Abstract
Tickling under immobilized conditions reliably produces a paradoxical affective state in which reported fear (autonomic threat activation) and reactionary laughter (paralinguistic submission vocalization) co-occur. Pilot data (n = 1) demonstrate acute heart-rate elevation (+42 bpm) coincident with laughter burst frequency (11.3 ± 0.7 laughs/30 s), supporting the hypothesis that perceived loss-of-control amplifies tickle hypersensitivity.
Materials & Methods
2.1 Participant
2.2 Apparatus
2.3 Stimulus Delivery
2.4 Physiological Recording
Results
Discussion
Immobilization-induced helplessness potentiates tickle percept by removing anticipatory motor modulation, consistent with Seligman’s learned-helplessness model. Co-activation of sympathetic arousal (fear) and nucleus ambiguus-mediated laughter indicates competing limbic outputs. Future fMRI studies (tickle-fMRI coil compatible) should parse anterior cingulate vs. periaqueductal gray involvement.
Conclusion
The described protocol safely elicits measurable fear-tickle superimposition, offering a reproducible paradigm for psychosomatic stress and erotic-submission research.

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