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What determines ticklish sensitivity?

I would say in my experience that tickling is more sensitive when the skin is bare. That includes armpits, sides, and feet. I would say every glee I have ever had admit that tickling on bare feet is worse than tickling with socks on. So if you’re talking about sensitivity, take that into account. On the flipside of that, I don’t know any women under the age of 45 to wear pantyhose for tickling.
 
I've always believed in the physiological aspect of tickling.
The feeling of helplessness and vulnerability. Knowing the intent is to be tickled mercilessly. Realising that bondage is perhaps more secure than you thought.
All these things can add to a mental pathway of feeling more sensitive.
 
Each nervous system is different and the context in which one experiences a sensation can impact it's intensity. I know for me at least, my high sensitivity is connected to my over sensitive sensory processing. All of my senses are more intense and tickling is an extension of that. Certain dynamics with a ler such as feeling helpless, bound, or spread out intensify the psychological aspect, but it's all an extension of my inborn sensitivity.
 
I got a story idea earlier today and have been doing some AI-assisted research on that exact thing, specifically regarding the soles of the feet. Fwiw, here's a geeky, sciencey-sounding summary.

Ticklishness is shaped by neurological, anatomical, and psychological factors. The most relevant determinants are:

1. Peripheral Mechanoreceptor Density

The skin of the soles contains several types of light-touch receptors:
  • Meissner corpuscles (fast-adapting, motion-sensitive)
  • Merkel disks (pressure and fine detail)
  • C-tactile nerve fibers (slow, pleasant-touch fibers)
People with higher density of these receptors—especially Meissner corpuscles—tend to be more ticklish. This density varies genetically and somewhat with age.

2. Nerve Conduction Speed and Integrity

Ticklish reactions depend on the rapid firing of:
  • A-beta fibers (fine touch)
  • A-delta fibers (light mechanical irritation)
  • Spinal reflex arcs (withdrawal and startle)
  • Ascending somatosensory pathways
Faster or more synchronized conduction often increases sensitivity. Peripheral neuropathy, diabetes, or early neurodegenerative changes can reduce it.

3. Cerebellar Predictive Coding

Tickling exploits a specific neurological phenomenon: the brain can't predict externally generated light touch. The cerebellum normally dampens predicted sensations. When it fails to predict (because the touch is external and unpredictable), the signal becomes unusually intense. People whose cerebellar prediction circuitry is highly reactive or easily disrupted tend to show:
  • stronger tickle reflexes
  • faster laughter-onset
  • difficulty suppressing the reaction
4. Startle Reflex Strength

Tickling triggers micro-startle responses:
  • tiny jerks
  • withdrawal attempts
  • rhythmic contractions
  • laughter coupling through the brainstem
People with stronger or more excitable startle reflexes tend to be more ticklish.

5. Emotional Reactivity & Inhibition Levels

Ticklishness is not just sensory—it’s also affective. Factors include:
  • baseline anxiety
  • embarrassment sensitivity
  • social inhibition level
  • how strongly someone suppresses involuntary reactions
Individuals who try very hard to stay composed often end up having:
  • stronger bursts of involuntary laughter
  • more dramatic reflex failures
  • higher perceived ticklishness
Suppression amplifies the mismatch between intent and reflex.

6. Local Skin Characteristics

More minor contributors:
  • thinner epidermis
  • softer skin
  • dryness vs. moisture
  • callus patterns
  • temperature of the skin
  • sweat gland density
These change how tactile stimuli are transmitted.

7. Psychological Framing

Ticklishness increases with:
  • anticipation
  • uncertainty
  • a sense of vulnerability
  • inability to predict timing or pattern
This is why randomized stimuli are more effective than rhythmic ones.

Bottom line, a person is most ticklish when they have:
  • high mechanoreceptor density
  • fast, clean nerve conduction
  • strong cerebellar prediction error response
  • sensitive startle pathways
  • difficulty suppressing involuntary laughter
  • psychological sensitivity to being touched unpredictably
  • smooth, well-innervated skin
 
It's a combination of many various factors. Scientifically speaking, the crucial aspects are skin sensitivity, your psychological state and predictability.

Each person's skin sensitivity is a bit different but let's look at the simplest example: have you ever had completely dry heels? Or have you had them injured by ill-fitting shoes? The callousing makes your heels almost numb, right? That's the thing. Well-nurtured, moisturized skin is definitely more sensitive to the touch, not to mention the health and esthetics issue.

Psychological state plays a significant role here, too. When enraged, you're less receptive to a joyful reaction, so anger will likely decrease the response and tickling in that condition is going to infuriate you even more rather than amuse or relax you. Anxiety, on the other hand, although it's definitely not the state we strive for, nor do we feel pleasant or comfortable when it happens, is more likely to increase our sensitivity due to a high-alert our nervous system is put on. Heightened senses contribute to us becoming more sensitive to the outside stimuli, hence our sight, hearing and smell improve a lot, which is meant to help us survive in the face of potential danger, and skin sensitivity is not excluded here. It's all rooted in nature.

As for predictability, it's the main reason we cannot tickle ourselves - when we try, our brain knows exactly what's coming, so it recognizes the signals as safe and doesn't defend against them. The more unpredictable the touch is, the more intense our response is going to be. Which is also why sensory deprivation is a thing in kink and BDSM community. And also in the history of torture, obviously.

There are also plenty of other factors, like medication and/or substance use. While alcohol and benzodiazepines numb the system, in turn decrease our ticklish response as well as any other response, amphetamine and its derivatives do the exact opposite.

Fun-fact: Even our muscles condition matters here. When our muscles tense up, the fascia surrounding them tightens, making our nerves hypersensitive.

Long story short: It's complicated and there are many things our ticklishness depends on.
 
of a person? imho its mostly to do with the tickling skills, determination, focus, resilience, concentration, sensitivity, passion, organisation skills of the tickler and how well immobilized and positioned the person being tickled is
 
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