Christine R. Harris is a research scientist at the Center for Brain and Cognition at the University of California, San Diego. Harris received her Ph.D. in psychology from UCSD in 1998.
Her research interests are human emotion and interpersonal relationships. Harris' interest in tickling began as a graduate student when she read Charles Darwin's book "The Expressions of the Emotions in Man and Animal," particularly the section on tickling and humor. In an effort to find out what else was known about tickle, she discovered that, although ticklish laughter has been pondered since the ancient Greeks, there is almost no empirical work on the topic. The author of several papers a year since 1995, Harris is a pioneer in the field.
Besides tickling, Harris has also studied embarrassment and jealousy.
For links to this scientist's home page and other related infomation please see our resources page.
Harris responds :
2.06.01 Jed asked:
Is it true that in medieval times people were put to death by someone tickling their feet with a feather? "Tickled to death"? What is your take on that?
Harris' response:
Well, there are definitely some suggestions in the literature that this may have happened. For example, in the German novel, Die Abenteuerliche Simplicissimus, written in 1683 there is a woodcut depicting such torture. Mercenaries have tied up a farmer, put salt on his feet, and then have a goat lick the salt off. He supposedly laughs to death. Robert Provine's recent book on laughter also lists several other references of tickle torture in ancient times.
Her research interests are human emotion and interpersonal relationships. Harris' interest in tickling began as a graduate student when she read Charles Darwin's book "The Expressions of the Emotions in Man and Animal," particularly the section on tickling and humor. In an effort to find out what else was known about tickle, she discovered that, although ticklish laughter has been pondered since the ancient Greeks, there is almost no empirical work on the topic. The author of several papers a year since 1995, Harris is a pioneer in the field.
Besides tickling, Harris has also studied embarrassment and jealousy.
For links to this scientist's home page and other related infomation please see our resources page.
Harris responds :
2.06.01 Jed asked:
Is it true that in medieval times people were put to death by someone tickling their feet with a feather? "Tickled to death"? What is your take on that?
Harris' response:
Well, there are definitely some suggestions in the literature that this may have happened. For example, in the German novel, Die Abenteuerliche Simplicissimus, written in 1683 there is a woodcut depicting such torture. Mercenaries have tied up a farmer, put salt on his feet, and then have a goat lick the salt off. He supposedly laughs to death. Robert Provine's recent book on laughter also lists several other references of tickle torture in ancient times.