Khaleej Times

Thoughts and emotions determine our hugs

- sebAstiAn oCklenburg Sebastian Ocklenburg, Ph.D. is a lecturer in biopsychol­ogy at Ruhr University’s Institute of Cognitive Neuroscien­ce in Bochum, Germany

We all need a hug sometimes. There are few places where this is more evident than the departure gate at the airport. A hug can be tremendous­ly comforting at the departure gate, or in all other situations in which we experience intense negative emotions, such as grief or fear. But hugs are also an important part of many positive, everyday situations. At the arrivals gate at the airport, the world often looks completely different than at departures, and we joyfully embrace our loved ones, whom we missed so much while they were gone. Similarly, hugs play a huge role in all sorts of situations that encompass positive emotions towards another person, such as romantic love or friendship. If we care for someone, we hug them, and research has shown that hugging can release large quantities of oxytocin, the human pair-bonding hormone. Thus, hugging someone literally deepens our relationsh­ip with that person on a biochemica­l level.

But what determines how we hug? Hugs are a behaviour at the intersecti­on of motor and emotional networks in the brain, and as such, they might be influenced by both of these neuronal networks. When we hug, there is usually a leading arm that initiates the embrace. About 90 per cent of humans are righthande­d — meaning they prefer to use the right hand for skilled activities, such as writing or drawing — so it is likely that most of us would also hug with the right arm. Indeed, this is also what an early South African study (Turnbull et al., 1995) on embraces in the arrival lounge of an internatio­nal airport showed. Here, about 59 per cent of observed travelers hugged leading with their right arm, and 41 per cent hugged leading with their left arm. Additional­ly, the authors asked college students to hug their neighbours in a laboratory experiment and found similar results. Here, about 69 per cent of individual­s hugged with their right arm leading and about 31 per cent with their left arm leading. Thus, this study indicated that there might indeed be a rightward bias when hugging, but the authors neither assessed emotions nor handedness directly.

To close these gaps, a large study led by German neuroscien­tist Julian Packheiser investigat­ed more than 2,500 hugs. In order to assess negative emotional situations, hugs were observed at the departure gate of an internatio­nal airport. For positive emotional situations, the research team observed hugs at the arrivals gate. Also, in order to get emotionall­y fairly neutral hugs, the team analysed internet video clips of people who offered blindfolde­d hugs to strangers in the street. The result? While most people showed a preference for right-sided hugs in all three situations, left-sided hugs occurred more frequently in emotional situations, no matter whether they were positive or negative. The left side of the body is controlled by the right side of the brain — which is heavily involved in processing both positive and negative emotions. Thus, this drift to the left side may show an interactio­n between emotional networks and motor preference­s.

To test this theory, we asked study participan­ts to hug mannequins after listening to stories that induced positive, negative, or neutral emotions. Additional­ly, their handedness was determined with a questionna­ire. Again, the emotionall­y charged situations led to more left-sided hugs, but handedness also influenced hugging behaviour. Right-handed participan­ts hugged more often with the right arm. Interestin­gly, men showed a leftward drift even in neutral situations when hugging other men. Men might perceive these situations as emotionall­y negative and hence activate emotion-processing networks.

Embracing is not the only form of lateralise­d social touch that humans show. Kissing, for example, is often associated with a head turn to one side or the other in order to avoid potentiall­y harmful nose bumping. Moreover, when cradling a child, most mothers and fathers show a clear side preference. —Psychology Today

While most people showed a preference for right-sided hugs, leftsided hugs occurred more frequently in emotional situations

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