| Literature DB >> 28831270 |
Esslin L Terrighena1,2, Ge Lu1, Wai Ping Yuen1, Tatia Mc Lee1,2,3,4, Kati Keuper1,2,5.
Abstract
The observation of pain in others may enhance or reduce self-pain, yet the boundary conditions and factors that determine the direction of such effects are poorly understood. The current study set out to show that visual stimulus awareness plays a crucial role in determining whether vicarious pain primarily activates behavioral defense systems that enhance pain sensitivity and stimulate withdrawal or appetitive systems that attenuate pain sensitivity and stimulate approach. We employed a mixed factorial design with the between-subject factors exposure time (subliminal vs optimal) and vicarious pain (pain vs no pain images), and the within-subject factor session (baseline vs trial) to investigate how visual awareness of vicarious pain images affects subsequent self-pain in the cold-pressor test. Self-pain tolerance, intensity and unpleasantness were evaluated in a sample of 77 healthy participants. Results revealed significant interactions of exposure time and vicarious pain in all three dependent measures. In the presence of visual awareness (optimal condition), vicarious pain compared to no-pain elicited overall enhanced self-pain sensitivity, indexed by reduced pain tolerance and enhanced ratings of pain intensity and unpleasantness. Conversely, in the absence of visual awareness (subliminal condition), vicarious pain evoked decreased self-pain intensity and unpleasantness while pain tolerance remained unaffected. These findings suggest that the activation of defense mechanisms by vicarious pain depends on relatively elaborate cognitive processes, while - strikingly - the appetitive system is activated in highly automatic manner independent from stimulus awareness. Such mechanisms may have evolved to facilitate empathic, protective approach responses toward suffering individuals, ensuring survival of the protective social group.Entities:
Keywords: approach; defense; observation of pain; pain tolerance
Year: 2017 PMID: 28831270 PMCID: PMC5548267 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S132744
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Figure 1(A) Relationship among variables of interest. Vicarious pain may activate behavioral defense and behavioral appetitive system, resulting in decreased and increased self-pain experience, respectively. The current study investigates modulatory effects of visual awareness on the relationship between vicarious pain and self-pain experience. Corresponding factors and their factor levels as implemented in the study design are indicated in blue letters. (B) Visualization of Experimental Procedure. After completion of the Pain Sensitivity Questionnaire all participants completed the cold-pressor test (baseline self-pain). Depending on the assigned experimental group (subliminal pain, optimal pain, subliminal no-pain, optimal no-pain) participants were presented one of four passive viewing sequences, in which 130 images were shown randomly and repeated for five times. To illustrate the trial structure and stimuli included in the passive viewing task, example trials for each experimental group are depicted at the bottom of the figure. Following the passive viewing task, participants again underwent the cold-pressor test (trial self-pain). Pain tolerance, intensity and unpleasantness were obtained as measures for self-pain experience at baseline and trial.
Demographics and outliers for sample and per condition
| Sample | Sub Pain | Sub No-pain | Opt Pain | Opt No-pain | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total N | 77 | 18 | 20 | 20 | 19 |
| Gender N | |||||
| Males | 42 | 11 | 9 | 10 | 11 |
| Females | 35 | 7 | 11 | 10 | 8 |
| Age (years), M | 29.39 | 30.06 | 28.60 | 29.95 | 29.37 |
| PSQ, M | 4.70 | 4.43 | 4.73 | 4.78 | 4.75 |
Note:
Outliers removed.
Abbreviations: Sub, subliminal; Opt, optimal; PSQ, Pain Sensitivity Questionnaire.
Figure 2Bar charts depicting mean self-pain difference scores (trial – baseline) per condition for (A) pain tolerance in seconds; (B) pain intensity in millimeters; (C) pain unpleasantness in millimeters. Error bars depict standard errors (***α<0.001, **α<0.01, *α<0.05).
Gender differences in baseline pain measurements: means, SDs, t-values and p-values
| Gender | Mean (SD) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tolerance (seconds) | Female | 29.48 (25.85) | −2.806 | 0.006 |
| Male | 49.02 (35.16) | |||
| Intensity (mm) | Female | 58.51 (21.49) | 1.819 | 0.034 |
| Male | 49.76 (20.63) | |||
| Unpleasantness (mm) | Female | 65.31 (20.73) | 1.718 | 0.045 |
| Male | 56.86 (22.14) |
Notes:
α<0.05,
α<0.01.
Abbreviation: df, degrees of freedom.
Pearson’s correlation (r) for all baseline pain measurements
| Tolerance | Intensity | Unpleasantness | |
|---|---|---|---|
| PSQ scores | 0.067 | 0.318 | 0.226 |
| Tolerance | / | −0.341 | −0.355 |
| Intensity | / | / | 0.832 |
Notes:
α<0.05,
α<0.001.
Abbreviation: PSQ, Pain Sensitivity Questionnaire.