Citations:ASMRotica

Noun: "(neologism) a subgenre of ASMR content intended to be sexually stimulating or appealing"

 * 2015, Kathryn Lindsay, "Inside the Sensual World of ASMRotica", VICE, 15 August 2015:
 * When it comes to traditional ASMR, every view, take or comment comes with the same question: is this sexual? Should I be turned on? ASMRotica makes it easy: yes.
 * 2018, Emily O'Connor, "Becoming Video: Indeterminacy, Intimacy, Image", thesis submitted to the University of New South Wales, pages 19-20:
 * Its connotation with sexual arousal has been disputed in the community (possibly in part because the videos are used as parental aids in attention-focusing for children) though others have embraced it, creating a sub-genre called ASMRotica which is designed specifically for sexual arousal.
 * 2019, Mark Andrew Choi, "Sucks to your ASMR", The Arrow (Westlake High School, Westlake, CA), 12 February 2019, page 16:
 * However, this couldn't be further from the truth, and ASMRotica makes up only a tiny piece of the ASMR community.
 * 2019, Maria Isabel Bode, "Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response (ASMR) as a marketing tool: An examination of the online phenomenon’s potential in the promotion mix of slow tourism destinations", thesis submitted to The City University of Applied Sciences, page 25:
 * Where mainstream ASMRtists don’t appreciate comments that refer to sexuality in any way, the ASMRotica subgenre welcomes these kind of viewers (Lindsay 2015: online).
 * 2020, Joe Molander, "More ASMR?", The Courier (Newcastle University), 16 March 2020, page 13:
 * Although a dedicated erotic faction does exist within the community, creating what its members call 'ASMRotica', creators insist that the genre has more to it than that.
 * 2020, Dzenana Vucic, "Digital intimacy and the aestheticisation of sound", Meanjin, March 2020:
 * ASMRotica goes even further: you can find YouTube videos of women giving what are essentially fantasy gobbies,