the left side of your brain
You can exercise your brain the same as you exercise your muscles.
Tickling activates a primitive part of our brain called the somatosensory cortex, which perceives touch and other physical sensations. It can trigger a mixed response of pleasure and discomfort, as the brain tries to make sense of the unexpected sensory input. The exact mechanism behind why we feel ticklish is not fully understood, but it may have evolved as a way to promote social bonding or as a defense mechanism against potential threats.
cerebellum
I don't quite understand the part where you said "house is tickling a tied up wilson" but I do have some good tickling stories.... I will write them on another answer.
The Sensory System.
Ourselves is a pronoun.
yes
I just don't know.AnswerReading people's comments, you get a feel for the motivation behind tickling -- a sort of sadistic, gleeful, juvenile impulse on the part of the tickler, a feeling of utter abandonment through laughter, tension and lack of oxygen on the part of the ticklee. :D
Most people experience ticklishness as a combination of good and bad. If someone is tickled too long it usually hurts. Even though they may be laughing, inside there is a fear of being helpless, and it can be uncomfortable. Scientists have done studies on the brain during tickling and telling jokes, and though on the outside it looks the same, they both laugh, on the inside the brain is doing very different things. I do not recommend tickling, it is really not fun. I also urge all adults to stop tickling children. It may be cute to make them laugh and smile, but you are programming a lifetime of fear and tension that is stored in their skin and nervous system. Please do not tickle anybody.
bob is buetiful and pretty
Cerebellum
The left lobe of your brain is the part of the brain you use to do math.