OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
We’re Longing for the One Thing the Metaverse
Can’t Give Us
Nov. 26,
2021, 5:00 a.m. ET
By JoAnna
Novak
Ms. Novak
is the author of several books of fiction and poetry.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/26/opinion/touch-starvation-metaverse-virtual-worlds.html
When Mark
Zuckerberg announced the rebranding of Facebook to Meta late last month in a
“founder’s letter,” I was on a video call with my writing group, discussing the
tactile joys of our craft — the benefits of writing by hand, our love of
beautiful Rhodia writing pads, our favorite examples of manuscript pages (mine:
David Foster Wallace’s, reeking of chew). Between three of us, we owned five
typewriters and no social media accounts. There we were in the metaverse,
longing for the one thing it can’t provide: the experience of touch.
Through
virtual and augmented reality (also Ray-Ban Stories smart glasses), Meta’s
technology aims to change how we live, how we connect with friends and family (imagine
teleporting hologram-you to concerts or Thanksgiving dinners). Except for all
its patter about bringing people together, Meta advances a fundamental human
disconnection: It removes our bodies from the equation.
I, for one,
will not go gentle into the metaverse. Not because I’m anti-technology (I’m
not) or unreasonably attached to the pleasures of gel ink pens and hard-bound
books (I may be). It’s because after struggling with anorexia and bulimia for
more than 20 years, the last thing I want is technology that further estranges
me from my body. “If we lose touch with ourselves,” the philosopher Richard
Kearney writes, “we lose touch with the world. No tactile connection, no
resonance between self and other.”
Months of
lockdowns, Zoom cocktails and elbow dabs have left us in a touch crisis. Books
like Mr. Kearney’s “Touch: Recovering Our Most Vital Sense” and Sushma
Subramanian’s “How to Feel: The Science and Meaning of Touch,” both published
this year, deal directly with this basic need. We’ve even developed a language
that likens touch to basic sustenance and survival: Articles about “touch
hunger” and “touch starvation” reveal just how vital this tactile connection
is. Touch is central to our humanity, the first sense we develop.
Virtual
world-builders know this, too, and are increasingly confronting the need for
touch and developing new ways to recreate it. There’s Steve Yonahan’s Haptic
Creature — a zoomorphic, robotic slothy thing that purrs and vibrates,
influencing the emotional states of humans who pet and hold it. Texas A&M
researchers are developing touch screens with “maximum haptic effect” to
transmit textures (you’ll feel the difference between sateen and percale sheets
online, they claim). Researchers at Johns Hopkins found incorporating haptic
feedback into prosthetic upper limbs has made them easier for amputees to use.
Tiffany
Field, the director of the Touch Research Institute at the University of Miami,
has been studying touch for more than four decades. Her research reveals the
importance of touch from the earliest stages of human life. Pregnancy massage
reduces low birth weight (as well as postpartum depression). Massaging the
limbs of preterm infants with moderate pressure leads them to gain weight 47
percent faster. Touch produces oxytocin, the “cuddle hormone” that bonds
parents to their newborns during “skin-to-skin time.” Touch improves
attentiveness and quantitative performance (speed and accuracy on math
problems). In adolescent mothers experiencing depression, massage decreases
anxious behaviors. In patients with H.I.V., massage therapy leads to an
increase in natural killer cells. Anorexia, autism, backaches, cancer, chronic
fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, multiple sclerosis and PTSD all respond to
touch.
Even
victims of sexual abuse benefit from therapeutic touch. After a month of
twice-weekly massages, women studied by the Touch Research Institute
experienced less depression and anxiety, and their cortisol levels had dropped.
Women in the no-massage control group “reported an increasingly negative
attitude toward touch.”
Reading
about the work of Liisa Holsti, a neonatal pain researcher, and Karon MacLean,
a haptics researcher, I was surprised how moved I could be learning about
haptic technology. Their 2020 study introduced the Calmer, a rectangular
incubator insert fitted with pneumatic bellows, subwoofers and a
microcontroller that replicates a mother’s breathing rate, heartbeat and touch
for preterm babies in the NICU. “Skin-to-skin time,” or “Kangaroo care,” when
the baby is laid belly-down on the parent’s chest after birth, lessens newborn
pain. If a parent can’t be present or a nurse is unavailable to comfort the
baby during a routine procedure, such as a blood draw, the Calmer offers an
alternative to human touch interaction, what a mother who participated in the
study described as “a backup me.”
I was
admittedly anti-touch for most of my life. (I’ve known other people with eating
disorders who are, too; my equally anti-touch best friend and I would joke
about the jangly awkwardness of our Christmas hug.) That changed when I had a
baby and I discovered how the six-pound weight of my son on my chest felt like
the heaviest love in the world. No wonder engineering the first sense is so
important.
And while
the expansion of the metaverse may incentivize teams like Facebook AI to
develop further somatosensory simulations, I am skeptical of the values that
will guide their work. Will they be as ethical as Dr. Holsti and Dr. MacLean,
who took 10 years to trial three prototypes of a haptic designed to “replicate
not replace” the maternal presence? Will Mr. Zuckerberg’s company be as
sensitive to users’ feelings of disconnection or disembodiment when supplying
them with sensory technologies like ReSkin, with its “scalable and inexpensive
tactile-sensation modules”?
Meta
signals Mr. Zuckerberg’s investment in the “embodied internet,” but it is
ultimately a technology that keeps us apart, making us ever more alienated from
our bodies and one another. Being disconnected from my body fed the self-hatred
and perfectionism that facilitated my eating disorder. We don’t need to swap
out our bodies with holographs and avatars. We need to nurture our sense of
touch. A firm hand squeeze during grace, a cuddle with the dog on the couch, a
hug like you mean it. In other words, the tactile joys of being alive.
JoAnna
Novak is the author of, most recently, the short story collection “Meaningful
Work” and the forthcoming “New Life,” a collection of poems.
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