If you’ve ever turned to YouTube on a sleepless night, it’s possible that you’ve encountered the wide-eyed, soft-spoken work of Emma Smith. Better known as Emma WhispersRed, of WhispersRed ASMR, the ...
Hushed whispers into a microphone, mouth noises accentuated, lips and hands embracing the mic as if a performer is physically connected with the audience... Hard to believe, perhaps, but the term ASMR ...
YouTuber Emma Whispers Red makes ASMR videos - which allegedly cause some people to feel "brain orgasms" ASMR videos - a YouTube phenomenon based around videos of people brushing hair, folding towels ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about relationships, personality, and everyday psychology. Have you ever heard or saw something that left your body ...
Remember when were kids and we’d sit in school auditoriums, asking our friends to trace figures with their fingers on our backs? Or when your grandma would stroke your hair, as you sat on her lap?
Millions of people log onto YouTube to watch ASMR (Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response) videos featuring repetitive every day actions like hair brushing and towel folding. A new study has found the ...
ASMR videos can mimic the feeling of physical touch, which a study has found is popular with young consumers. But how many intimate gestures of love, care and connection are they missing out on? You ...
ASMR stands for “autonomous sensory meridian response.” It’s a rather dry term, given that it refers to a physical sensation people describe as a peaceful, joyful tingling that floods their bodies.