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By Michelle Roberts
Health reporter, BBC News
The sense of touch is more sensitive among women than men because their fingers
are smaller, a study suggests.
Researchers at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, found greater sweat pore
density in smaller fingers.
The fingertip touch receptors, which cluster around sweat pore bases, were
therefore more tightly packed, they told the Journal of Neuroscience.
Higher sensitivity could improve the ability to perform tasks such as
embroidery or surgery, they said.
The researchers pressed progressively narrower parallel grooves against the
stationary fingertips of 100 volunteers
Those with smaller fingers, and these tended to be the women, could discern
tighter grooves.
The index finger is more sensitive than the little finger - but lead researcher
Dr Daniel Goldreich said this could be because sensitivity improves with
continued use.
He now plans to research whether children have more sensitive fingers than
adults.
Dr Andy Bremner, of Goldsmiths, University of London, who has studied touch in
children, said: "It could be that children find touch a particularly
informative sense because it is a more sensitive modality for them due to their
smaller hands and bodies.
"Parents and teachers may have to think twice before saying things like 'Look,
but don't touch'."
But Dr Tiffany Field, of the Touch Research Institute at the University of
Miami School of Medicine, said the findings could be the result of women's skin
being softer than men's and arranged slightly differently at the cellular
level.
Dr Mark Paterson, a social scientist at the University of Exeter who has been
studying the role of touch, said: "This study looks at one particular type of
touch receptor, but touch involves a number of receptor types working together.
"If we can understand more, it could lead to better modelling of virtual
touch."
It could, for example, lead to better simulations allowing online shoppers to
"touch and feel" the fabrics of clothes displayed on websites, he added.