Pool Gregory J, Schwegler Andria F, Theodore Brian R, Fuchs Perry N
Department of Psychology, St. Mary's University, San Antonio, TX 78228, USA.
Pain. 2007 May;129(1-2):122-9. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2006.10.008. Epub 2006 Dec 6.
Previous research indicates that men typically tolerate more pain in experimental settings than women. One likely explanation for these group differences in pain tolerance is conformity to traditional, gender group social norms (i.e., the ideal man is masculine and tolerates more pain; the ideal woman is feminine and tolerates less pain). According to self-categorization theory, norms guide behavior to the degree that group members adopt the group identity. Therefore, high-identifying men are expected to conform to gender norms and tolerate more pain than high-identifying women who conform to different gender norms as a guide for their behavior. We conducted two studies to investigate whether gender group identification moderates individuals' conformity to pain tolerance and reporting norms. In the first study, participants indicated their gender identification and expected tolerance of a hypothetical painful stimulus. As anticipated, high-identifying men reported significantly greater pain tolerance than high-identifying women. No differences existed between low-identifying men and women. To determine if self-reported pain tolerance in a role-playing scenario corresponds to actual pain tolerance in an experimental setting, the second study examined pain tolerance to a noxious stimulus induced by electrical stimulation of the index finger. The experimental outcome revealed that high-identifying men tolerated more painful stimulation than high-identifying women. Further, high-identifying men tolerated more pain than low-identifying men. These results highlight the influence of social norms on behavior and suggest the need to further explore the role of norms in pain reporting behaviors.
先前的研究表明,在实验环境中,男性通常比女性更能忍受疼痛。这些疼痛耐受性方面的群体差异的一个可能解释是对传统性别群体社会规范的遵从(即理想的男性是阳刚的,能忍受更多疼痛;理想的女性是阴柔的,能忍受的疼痛较少)。根据自我分类理论,规范在群体成员采纳群体身份的程度上指导行为。因此,高度认同男性身份的男性预计会遵从性别规范,比高度认同女性身份且遵从不同性别规范作为行为指南的女性更能忍受疼痛。我们进行了两项研究,以调查性别群体认同是否会调节个体对疼痛耐受性和报告规范的遵从情况。在第一项研究中,参与者表明了他们的性别认同以及对假设的疼痛刺激的预期耐受性。正如预期的那样,高度认同男性身份的男性报告的疼痛耐受性明显高于高度认同女性身份的女性。低度认同男性身份和女性身份的人之间没有差异。为了确定角色扮演场景中自我报告的疼痛耐受性是否与实验环境中的实际疼痛耐受性相符,第二项研究考察了食指电刺激诱发的有害刺激的疼痛耐受性。实验结果显示,高度认同男性身份的男性比高度认同女性身份的女性能忍受更多的疼痛刺激。此外,高度认同男性身份的男性比低度认同男性身份的男性能忍受更多的疼痛。这些结果突出了社会规范对行为的影响,并表明有必要进一步探讨规范在疼痛报告行为中的作用。