Short Wave - The Squishy, Slimey Science Of ASMR

Episode Date: May 19, 2020

Encore episode. The science is nascent and a little squishy, but researchers like Giulia Poerio are trying to better understand ASMR — a feeling triggered in the brains of some people by whispering,... soft tapping, and delicate gestures. She explains how it works, and tells reporter Emily Kwong why slime might be an Internet fad that is, for some, a sensory pleasure-trigger.Read more about Emily's reporting on ASMR on the NPR Shots Blog.Email the show at shortwave@npr.org. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Heyo, Maddie here. Hope you're all doing all right out there. While we're working on some new stuff, here's an episode from the early days of the show that you might have missed. I think you'll like it. New episode tomorrow. Make sure you subscribe to or follow our show on your podcast app of choice. And keep washing those paws. Okay, on to the show. You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. Maddie Safaya here with our very, very.
Starting point is 00:00:30 own shortwave reporter and sometimes host Emily Kwong. Greetings, Emily Kwong. Today's episode is about ASMR. I'm going to get out of whisper mode for a moment. Great. It was creeping me out. And explain, me too, with a quick story from a scientist in the UK named Julia. My name is Julia Puerreo. I am, God, I haven't thought about my age. I'm 31. Julia's a lecturer at the University of Essex. And she still remembers vividly being a little girl, and occasionally she would get this very distinct feeling in certain situations. Really early examples would be things like watching my mum brush her hair or put her makeup on, getting my feet bit measured for school shoes, a teacher explaining something to me really carefully.
Starting point is 00:01:22 And Maddie, in situations like these, she would enter this trance-like state of relaxation. The feeling itself is a warm, tingling sensation that starts at the crown of the head almost like bubbles under the scalp. That's not where bubbles go. And can spread throughout the rest of the body, so down the spine and through the limbs. That brain tingling feeling, experienced by some people, is called ASMR. Autonomous sensory meridian response, a psychophysiological experience reliably triggered by certain things like whispering, personal attention, soft voices, a whole host of things. So today on the show, ASMR researcher Julia Puerreou, helps us explain the science, behind this sensation. And we ask, does this have anything to do with the slime trend?
Starting point is 00:02:11 Ousing across the internet? I don't like it. It's coming for you, Maddie, Sophia. Maddie? Yes, ma'am. Our tour guide through the world of ASMR is Julia Poirio. We're going to hear from her in a bit. She is a real-life person who experiences ASMR. A real live one. And researches it. ASMR is not exactly. a big field of scientific study. And it's only been a thing in public discussion for about a dozen years. That's about when in 2007 people began to find each other and build communities online, calling this feeling they had ASMR. So these people just like get really zend out by whispering? There's a whole host of different triggers for different people. It could be whispering.
Starting point is 00:03:06 Soft tapping, rustling of paper. There seems to be a visual component to all of this, but not Always. Things like slow movements, delicate hand gestures can induce an ASMR experience. One of the most popular ASM artists on YouTube, that's what the people who make these ASMR videos online are called, is ASMR darling. Here she is quietly touching a little house made of Legos with her fingernails. Uh-huh, yeah. Here she is unwrapping a starburst. Yeah, that is a starburst being unwrapped. My personal favorite, here she is counting down slowly in a whisper from a thousand.
Starting point is 00:03:57 These videos, they get millions of views on YouTube. When you and I hear this, we hear it. But for some people, they feel it. And that's what happens for Julia and those who experience ASMR. It's a little bit like music-induced chills or-inspired chills. So sometimes, you know, if you hear an amazing speech, like a Martin Luther King speech, you might get those kind of those goosebumps, those shivers up your spine, which is a really kind of complex, emotional, aesthetic response that some people experience
Starting point is 00:04:31 and other people don't. So this is a young woman doing this and you're like looking at her face and she's really close to the camera. It seems very intimate. Is this like, is this a sex thing, Kwong? To be honest, that was my initial thought too. I don't experience ASMR. But Julia said, based on studies, she's done monitoring those who do. ASMR is not the feeling of getting turned on.
Starting point is 00:04:59 In our research, we, of course, measured people's heart rates. And on average, heart rate decreased when people watched ASMR videos, which is exactly the opposite of what you would expect if it was somehow a sexually arousing feeling. I don't know why, but that makes me feel better about it. It is. It's something else. So if it's not like this sexual feeling, what is it? Like in the brains of people who experience it, what's going on? We don't actually know what is happening, truly, in the brains of people who experience it,
Starting point is 00:05:25 nor how many people experience it at all. The important thing to know here is there isn't a ton of scientific research on this topic. There is one study, though, that really interested, Julia. It's a 2016 paper by Canadian researchers that looked at the brains of people who experience ASMR when their brains were in a restful state, basically not. doing anything. And they looked at this specific network within the brain. Something called the default mode network, which is associated with things like daydreaming and mind wandering and also self-referential thought. And what they found was that essentially
Starting point is 00:06:01 that they thought that the brain network activity at rest shows that they're less able to inhibit sensory and emotional responses. Basically, they were less able to separate the link between what their senses are picking up and what they're feeling in their bodies. sensory emotional experiences weren't as suppressed. Okay, that makes sense to me. They experienced their senses in a different way than like I experience my senses or something like that. Kind of. Like I said, this is one of many early studies.
Starting point is 00:06:31 And what's also interesting is how people are experimenting with new ASMR triggers on the internet. Remember the oozing I mentioned earlier? Yeah, I remember that. It was unfortunate. I have with me in my hand something that produces sound. And I'm going to introduce it to you. Oh. You did have a nice little bit of flare.
Starting point is 00:06:54 So what I'm holding in my hand is slime. Oh, my God. Flom, technically, slime with little foam pieces inside. Do you hear that? Yeah, I can hear it. Well, in the last few years, there's been a boom in videos of people manipulating slime. Yeah. It'll have color or glitter or charms mixed into it.
Starting point is 00:07:18 very creative with their slimes. It's fun to play with, and it also has a sound. Not doing it for you? No, it's not. It's doing something different. In fact, you are shrinking in your seat trying to get as far away from me as possible. I don't, I don't like it. Do you want to play with it? I mean, excuse me, you. Why did you give me the part one? I brought this in because if you search hashtag ASMR on Instagram right now, guess how many posts come up? Six. Seven point six million. Oh my God. And the vast, not vast majority, but a number of them are videos of people doing exactly what you're doing right now.
Starting point is 00:07:58 Just manipulating slime and making these satisfying, squishy sounds. Are there groups of people who experience anti-ASMR? Like, instead of feeling sooth, right now I feel very unsettled and my belly hurts. That would be called misophonia, different episode. We wanted to ask our scientist, Julia, if slime is a bowl. unified trigger for ASMR. I mean, I guess that there are parallels. Probably people who experience ASMR would experience ASMR when they're watching things like slime videos.
Starting point is 00:08:29 However, one thing I would say is that actually there's been quite a lot of interlocking between different kind of trends. So, ASMR and slime and things like McBang have all kind of... Side note, McBang started in South Korea. It broadcast people eating food while talking to their audience with high quality microphones. What a nightmare. The internet. Slime and things like Macbang have all... almost piggybacked onto the ASMR trend.
Starting point is 00:08:53 Sure. Under the sometimes category on the internet of oddly satisfying. Yeah. Or the hashtag ASMR because I suspect it is piggybacking on ASMR as a kind of term to get people to watch videos. So when you see a video of someone, let's say cutting soap or icing a cookie, someone playing with really pretty slime, that may be oddly satisfying. But if you don't have the brain tingles, it's not ASMR that's talking to you. At the same time, Julia said that the more ASMR is linked to things like slime videos, that could change what it means for people on the internet.
Starting point is 00:09:27 She's focused, though, on the world of science and has a lot of outstanding questions. Why do some people experience it and others don't? Why do some people experience it at a higher intensity than others? And also, and this is really interesting to me, what is the effect of ASMR on sleep? So we know anecdotally that people who experience ASMR use these videos on use, YouTube to help them go to sleep. And I guess a question is, well, why does ASMR help you go to sleep? And another important question with regards to sleep is, you know, does it not only help you get to sleep, but does it also improve the quality of your sleep? So for some people,
Starting point is 00:10:08 this might be like the modern day version of counting sheep. Who says counting sheep? Thanks again to Julia Poirio in the the UK. And special thanks to Emmanuel Johnson and NPR's Vanessa Castillo for their help on this episode. And thank you, Emily Kwong, reporter for Shortwave here at NPR's Science Desk,
Starting point is 00:10:40 and sometimes slimy host of Shortwave. You're welcome. I'm Maddie Safaya. Thanks for listening to Shortwave from NPR. Face masks have become the new normal as we continue to grapple with the ongoing pandemic. But when did we start wearing masks for our health
Starting point is 00:10:58 and safety. This week on ThruLine, the origins of the N95 mask and how it became the lifesaving tool it is today. Throughline from NPR, the podcast where we go back in time to understand the present.

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