| Literature DB >> 26884131 |
Brianna Beck1,2,3, Elisabetta Làdavas4,5, Patrick Haggard6.
Abstract
Viewing the body can influence pain perception, even when vision is non-informative about the noxious stimulus. Prior studies used either continuous pain rating scales or pain detection thresholds, which cannot distinguish whether viewing the body changes the discriminability of noxious heat intensities or merely shifts reported pain levels. In Experiment 1, participants discriminated two intensities of heat-pain stimulation. Noxious stimuli were delivered to the hand in darkness immediately after participants viewed either their own hand or a non-body object appearing in the same location. The visual condition varied randomly between trials. Discriminability of the noxious heat intensities (d') was lower after viewing the hand than after viewing the object, indicating that viewing the hand reduced the information about stimulus intensity available within the nociceptive system. In Experiment 2, the hand and the object were presented in separate blocks of trials. Viewing the hand shifted perceived pain levels irrespective of actual stimulus intensity, biasing responses toward 'high pain' judgments. In Experiment 3, participants saw the noxious stimulus as it approached and touched their hand or the object. Seeing the pain-inducing event counteracted the reduction in discriminability found when viewing the hand alone. These findings show that viewing the body can affect both perceptual processing of pain and responses to pain, depending on the visual context. Many factors modulate pain; our study highlights the importance of distinguishing modulations of perceptual processing from modulations of response bias.Entities:
Keywords: Body; Crossmodal; Nociception; Pain; Signal detection
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26884131 PMCID: PMC4893070 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-016-4585-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Brain Res ISSN: 0014-4819 Impact factor: 1.972
Fig. 1Experimental setup with semi-silvered mirror. a When the left side of the mirror was illuminated, the foam block was seen in place of the right hand. b When the right side of the mirror was illuminated, the right hand was seen in its true location
Fig. 2Results of Experiment 1 (randomized presentation of hand/object), Experiment 2 (blocked presentation of hand/object), and Experiment 3 (probe seen approaching hand/object). a Mean (±SEM) scores of discriminability (d′) on the y axis and response bias (criterion) on the x axis. An increase on the y axis indicates enhanced discriminability of noxious heat intensities. An increase on the x axis indicates a greater tendency to respond ‘medium,’ irrespective of actual stimulus intensity. b Mean (±SEM) hit rates (percentages of high heat-pain stimuli called ‘high’) on the y axis and false alarm rates (percentages of medium heat-pain stimuli called ‘high’) on the x axis. An increase on the y axis indicates a higher proportion of high heat-pain stimuli perceived as ‘high.’ An increase on the x axis indicates a higher proportion of medium heat-pain stimuli perceived as ‘high’