HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
For several years, the phenomenon of autonomous sensory meridian response (ASMR) has been the subject of scientific research by scholars from various fields: from cultural studies, through media and social sciences, to psychology, psychiatry and cognitive engineering. Analyses of the online ASMR phenomenon occasionally include the notions of affect and affectivity as conceptually relevant elements of theoretical research frameworks. Gallagher locates the ASMR phenomenon in a mediascape full of so-called affective "triggers", Smith and Snider consider ASMR a mediated affective experience, and Łapińska (2020a) analyzes from a posthuman perspective the affective properties . . .
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