University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, British Columbia, Canada.
J Pain. 2010 Sep;11(9):904-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2009.12.015. Epub 2010 Mar 15.
The present study evaluated the effects of exposure to facial expression of pain, on observers' perceptions of pain expression. Participants were undergraduates shown brief video clips of the facial expressions of shoulder-pain patients displaying no pain or moderate pain. Participants were randomly allocated to either a high preexposure condition in which each clip was preceded by 10 other clips showing strong pain or a no-exposure control. On each test trial, participants indicated whether they thought the person they saw was in pain or not. Data were analyzed using signal detection theory methods. High prior exposure to pain was unrelated to sensitivity to pain expression, but did significantly diminish the likelihood of judging the other to be in pain. Results are discussed in terms of their implications for pain judgments of health-care professionals, adaptation-level theory, and the psychophysical method of selective adaptation.
This paper provides an experimental demonstration that, when people have large amounts of exposure to others' expressions of pain, their estimation of others' pain is reduced. The findings offer 1 explanation for the widely observed underestimation bias in pain judgments and may suggest ways of changing it.
目的:本研究评估了观察者接触疼痛表情对其感知疼痛表达的影响。
参与者:参与者为大学生,观看了显示无疼痛或中度疼痛的肩部疼痛患者面部表情的简短视频片段。参与者被随机分配到高预暴露条件或无暴露对照组。在每个测试试验中,参与者表示他们是否认为他们看到的人在疼痛中。使用信号检测理论方法分析数据。
结果:高预先暴露于疼痛与对疼痛表达的敏感性无关,但确实显著降低了判断他人疼痛的可能性。结果根据健康护理专业人员的疼痛判断、适应水平理论和选择性适应的心理物理方法的意义进行了讨论。
结论:本文提供了一个实验证据,表明当人们大量接触他人的疼痛表情时,他们对他人疼痛的估计会减少。该发现为广泛观察到的疼痛判断中的低估偏差提供了一种解释,并且可能暗示了改变这种偏差的方法。