Somatosensory processing can be probed empirically through vibrotactile psychophysical experiments.Psychophysical approaches are valuable for investigating both normal and abnormal tactile function in healthy and clinical populations. To date, the test-retest reliability of vibrotactile detection and discrimination thresholds has yet to be established. This study sought to assess the reproducibility of vibrotactile detection and discrimination thresholds in human adults using an established vibrotactile psychophysical battery. Fifteen healthy adults underwent three repeat sessions of an eleven-task battery that measured a range of vibrotactile measures, including reaction time, detection threshold, amplitude and frequency discrimination, and temporal order judgement. Coefficients of variation and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) were calculated for the measures in each task. Linear mixedeffects models were used to test for length and training effects and differences between tasks within the same domain. Reaction times were shown to be the most reproducible (ICC: ~0.9) followed by detection thresholds (ICC: ~0.7). Frequency discrimination thresholds were the least reproducible (ICC: ~0.3). As reported in prior studies, significant differences in measures between related tasks were also found, demonstrating the reproducibility of task-related effects. These findings show that vibrotactile detection and discrimination thresholds are reliable, further supporting the use of psychophysical experiments to probe tactile function.Psychophysical experiments can be used to probe somatosensory processing empirically. Quantitative measures of vibrotactile sensitivity, in particular, have been used to elucidate on the cortical mechanisms underlying such processing 1,2 . Such behavioural approaches have proven to be valuable and may reflect cortical mechanisms underlying somatosensory function. For example, GABAergic inhibition drives neuronal responses to sensory stimulation 3,4 linked to behavioural outcomes. Measuring such behavioural outcomes may, therefore, provide information about cortical inhibition. The targeting of specific neuronal mechanisms of tactile function through psychophysics allows for the investigation of individual differences in healthy brain function or of impairments in disorders hypothesized to be driven by inhibitory dysfunction. Early work established the neurophysiological basis of tactile function in both nonhuman and human primates 5-10 . Psychophysical testing of sensory processing in general also has a long history 11,12 upon which present-day research has been built.A behavioural battery of psychophysical paradigms for assessing vibrotactile function 13 was previously developed and shown to be successfully implementable in both adults and typically developing children. The vibrotactile stimuli used in the paradigms fall within the flutter range of touch (<50 Hz), which are processed by rapidly adapting (RA) I mechanoreceptors in the glabrous skin 7,9 . The neurophysiology of amplitude...