touch modality

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touch modality

A child uses their touch modality to identify a soft toy in a bag.

Definition
  1. Noun:
    • The sense of physical contact; the ability to perceive objects or forces through direct bodily contact: "touch modality" refers specifically to the sensory system responsible for detecting pressure, temperature, pain, and texture when the body, particularly the skin, comes into contact with something.
Usage
  • "Touch modality" is a formal, scientific term used primarily in psychology, neuroscience, and physiology. It describes one of the five primary human senses. In everyday language, this is more simply called the "sense of touch" or "tactile sense."
Examples
  • Noun:
    • The study compared the visual and touch modalities for learning shapes.
    • Damage to the nerves can impair the touch modality.
    • Only sight and touch modality enable us to locate objects in the space around us.
Advanced Usage
  • In sensory integration: The term is used in contexts discussing how different sensory systems (e.g., auditory, visual, touch) work together.
    • The therapist assessed the child's touch modality to understand his sensory processing issues.
Variants and Related Words
  • Tactile modality: A direct synonym often used interchangeably with "touch modality."
  • Somatosensory system: A broader, more technical term that includes the sense of touch (touch modality) as well as the perception of body position and movement.
  • Haptic perception: Refers specifically to the use of the touch modality to recognize objects through active exploration.
Synonyms
  • Sense of touch
  • Tactile sense
  • Cutaneous sense
Related Phrases
  • Tactile feedback: Information received through the touch modality, often in technology (e.g., a vibrating phone).
  • Tactile sensation: A single instance of feeling something through the touch modality.
touch modality

A child uses their touch modality to identify a soft toy in a bag.

Noun
  1. the faculty by which external objects or forces are perceived through contact with the body (especially the hands)
    • only sight and touch enable us to locate objects in the space around us