Brain Sciences (Mar 2020)

Keeping in Touch with Mental Health: The Orienting Reflex and Behavioral Outcomes from Calatonia

  • Anita Ribeiro Blanchard,
  • William Edgar Comfort

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci10030182
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
p. 182

Abstract

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Physical and psychological therapy based on touch has been gradually integrated into broader mental health settings in the past two decades, evolving from a variety of psychodynamic, neurobiological and trauma-based approaches, as well as Eastern and spiritual philosophies and other integrative and converging systems. Nevertheless, with the exception of a limited number of well-known massage therapy techniques, only a few structured protocols of touch therapy have been standardized and researched to date. This article describes a well-defined protocol of touch therapy in the context of psychotherapy—the Calatonia technique—which engages the orienting reflex. The orienting reflex hypothesis is explored here as one of the elements of this technique that helps to decrease states of hypervigilance and chronic startle reactivity (startle and defensive reflexes) and restore positive motivational and appetitive states.

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