Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London , London , UK.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2013 Jul 23;7:386. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00386. eCollection 2013.
Several studies in cognitive neuroscience have investigated the cognitive and affective modulation of pain. By contrast, fewer studies have focused on the social modulation of pain, despite a plethora of relevant clinical findings. Here we present the first review of experimental studies addressing how interpersonal factors, such as the presence, behavior, and spatial proximity of an observer, modulate pain. Based on a systematic literature search, we identified 26 studies on experimentally induced pain that manipulated different interpersonal variables and measured behavioral, physiological, and neural pain-related responses. We observed that the modulation of pain by interpersonal factors depended on (1) the degree to which the social partners were active or were perceived by the participants to possess possibility for action; (2) the degree to which participants could perceive the specific intentions of the social partners; (3) the type of pre-existing relationship between the social partner and the person in pain, and lastly, (4) individual differences in relating to others and coping styles. Based on these findings, we propose that the modulation of pain by social factors can be fruitfully understood in relation to a recent predictive coding model, the free energy framework, particularly as applied to interoception and social cognition. Specifically, we argue that interpersonal interactions during pain may function as social, predictive signals of contextual threat or safety and as such influence the salience of noxious stimuli. The perception of such interpersonal interactions may in turn depend on (a) prior beliefs about interpersonal relating and (b) the certainty or precision by which an interpersonal interaction may predict environmental threat or safety.
一些认知神经科学的研究已经调查了疼痛的认知和情感调节。相比之下,尽管有大量相关的临床发现,但很少有研究关注疼痛的社会调节。在这里,我们首次综述了实验研究,这些研究探讨了人际因素(如观察者的存在、行为和空间接近程度)如何调节疼痛。基于系统的文献检索,我们确定了 26 项关于实验性诱导疼痛的研究,这些研究操纵了不同的人际变量,并测量了行为、生理和神经相关的疼痛反应。我们观察到,人际因素对疼痛的调节取决于:(1)社会伙伴的活跃程度或参与者认为社会伙伴具有行动可能性的程度;(2)参与者能够感知社会伙伴特定意图的程度;(3)社会伙伴与疼痛患者之间预先存在的关系类型;最后,(4)与他人相关和应对方式的个体差异。基于这些发现,我们提出,社会因素对疼痛的调节可以与最近的预测编码模型(自由能框架)很好地联系起来,特别是应用于内感受和社会认知。具体而言,我们认为疼痛过程中的人际互动可以作为环境威胁或安全的社会、预测信号,并因此影响伤害性刺激的显著性。对这种人际互动的感知反过来可能取决于:(a)对人际关系的先验信念;以及(b)人际互动预测环境威胁或安全的确定性或精确性。