Literature DB >> 22465136

How expectations shape pain.

Lauren Y Atlas1, Tor D Wager.   

Abstract

Pain is highly modifiable by psychological factors, including expectations. However, pain is a complex phenomenon, and expectations may work by influencing any number of processes that underlie the construction of pain. Neuroimaging has begun to provide a window into these brain processes, and how expectations influence them. In this article, we review findings regarding expectancy effects on brain markers of nociception and how expectations lead to changes in subjective pain. We address both expectations about treatments (placebo analgesia and nocebo effects) and expectations about the environment (e.g. expectations about pain itself). The body of work reviewed indicates that expectancies shape pain-intensity processing in the central nervous system, with strong effects on nociceptive portions of insula, cingulate and thalamus. Expectancy effects on subjective experience are driven by responses in these regions as well as regions less reliably activated by changes in noxious input, including the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the orbitofrontal cortex. Thus, multiple systems are likely to interact and mediate the pain-modulatory effects of expectancies. Finally, we address open questions regarding the psychological processes likely to play an intervening role in expectancy effects on pain.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22465136     DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2012.03.039

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurosci Lett        ISSN: 0304-3940            Impact factor:   3.046


  103 in total

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Authors:  Saira R Rivas-Suárez; Jaime Águila-Vázquez; Bárbara Suárez-Rodríguez; Lázaro Vázquez-León; Margarita Casanova-Giral; Roberto Morales-Morales; Boris C Rodríguez-Martín
Journal:  J Evid Based Complementary Altern Med       Date:  2015-10-11

2.  What do you expect? Catastrophizing mediates associations between expectancies and pain-facilitatory processes.

Authors:  Junie S Carriere; Marc Olivier Martel; Samantha M Meints; Marise C Cornelius; Robert R Edwards
Journal:  Eur J Pain       Date:  2019-01-09       Impact factor: 3.931

3.  Neurobiology of placebo effects: expectations or learning?

Authors:  Marta Peciña; Christian S Stohler; Jon-Kar Zubieta
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2013-07-24       Impact factor: 3.436

4.  Behavioural and neural evidence for self-reinforcing expectancy effects on pain.

Authors:  Marieke Jepma; Leonie Koban; Johnny van Doorn; Matt Jones; Tor D Wager
Journal:  Nat Hum Behav       Date:  2018-10-29

5.  Reevaluating the effectiveness of n-back training on transfer through the Bayesian lens: Support for the null.

Authors:  Michael R Dougherty; Toby Hamovitz; Joe W Tidwell
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2016-02

6.  Alcohol Expectancy and Cerebral Responses to Cue-Elicited Craving in Adult Nondependent Drinkers.

Authors:  Simon Zhornitsky; Sheng Zhang; Jaime S Ide; Herta H Chao; Wuyi Wang; Thang M Le; Robert F Leeman; Jinbo Bi; John H Krystal; Chiang-Shan R Li
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging       Date:  2018-12-12

7.  Conceptual Conditioning: Mechanisms Mediating Conditioning Effects on Pain.

Authors:  Marieke Jepma; Tor D Wager
Journal:  Psychol Sci       Date:  2015-09-17

8.  It's all in your head: reinforcing the placebo response with tDCS.

Authors:  H M Schambra; M Bikson; T D Wager; M F DosSantos; A F DaSilva
Journal:  Brain Stimul       Date:  2014-04-15       Impact factor: 8.955

9.  Specifying the non-specific factors underlying opioid analgesia: expectancy, attention, and affect.

Authors:  Lauren Y Atlas; Joseph Wielgosz; Robert A Whittington; Tor D Wager
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2013-10-06       Impact factor: 4.530

10.  Placebo Effects on the Neurologic Pain Signature: A Meta-analysis of Individual Participant Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Data.

Authors:  Matthias Zunhammer; Ulrike Bingel; Tor D Wager
Journal:  JAMA Neurol       Date:  2018-11-01       Impact factor: 18.302

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