Why does our skin gets itchy when we make contact with something that’s shaking, like a bus seat or a massage chair?

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Why does our skin gets itchy when we make contact with something that’s shaking, like a bus seat or a massage chair?

In: Biology

10 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Some nerves in the body require physical energy to send a signal. To the brain that tells you how things are outside the skull.

The body tells you there is pressure from a hand on your face or wind from the more signals and the centralized or decentralized location of the activations plus things like frequency and amount.

Vibrations can lower the amount of energy required this in the sense to send a signal. The energy resonates through you and wherever the resonance peaks like sturdy bones or dissipates like your shoes it will feel different than the rest. You blockout small amounts of signal like background noise of a fan or the wilderness. The buildup of response louder than the rest will cause itchiness.

Please read further here but that’s as simple I can make it without being too wordy as a child might know even less words than I said but I couldn’t think of good words to substitute.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itch

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