Pronina I, Rule N O
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Eur J Pain. 2014 Nov;18(10):1452-7. doi: 10.1002/ejp.510. Epub 2014 Apr 15.
There is ample research to support the existence of bias in the perception of others' pain. Both studies involving health-care professionals and student surrogate samples have found that, firstly, pain is under-perceived when using nonverbal cues to gauge another's suffering and, secondly, that personal characteristics of both the viewer and the target (such as gender) can bias pain perception, affecting the allocation of help. However, the extant research shows conflicts about the direction of the bias that target gender exerts on pain perception. Our study aims to address these challenges by examining whether under-perception of pain can be attenuated or exacerbated with gender primes and how target gender affects nonverbal pain perception, in particular.
University students (N = 120) were primed with either masculine, neutral, or feminine concepts followed by photos of male and female targets displaying various levels of pain and asked to quantify the photographed targets' distress.
Participants perceived lower target distress when this task was preceded by a masculine gender prime, as compared to a neutral or feminine gender prime. Pain was underestimated for all targets; however, this underestimation was significantly more pronounced for female targets.
These results suggest that gender cues may influence the perception of observed pain and, as a result, clinical decision making. They also support the conjecture that nonverbal pain cues may be under-perceived in women.
有大量研究支持在对他人疼痛的认知中存在偏差。涉及医疗保健专业人员和学生替代样本的研究均发现,首先,在使用非语言线索来判断他人的痛苦时,疼痛被低估;其次,观察者和目标对象(如性别)的个人特征会使疼痛认知产生偏差,影响帮助的分配。然而,现有研究在目标对象性别对疼痛认知产生偏差的方向上存在冲突。我们的研究旨在通过检验疼痛的低估是否会因性别启动而减弱或加剧,以及目标对象性别如何具体影响非语言疼痛认知,来应对这些挑战。
对120名大学生进行启动,使其接触男性化、中性或女性化概念,随后展示表现出不同程度疼痛的男性和女性目标对象的照片,并要求他们量化照片中目标对象的痛苦程度。
与中性或女性化性别启动相比,在男性化性别启动后进行该任务时,参与者感知到的目标对象痛苦程度更低。所有目标对象的疼痛都被低估了;然而,这种低估在女性目标对象中更为明显。
这些结果表明,性别线索可能会影响对观察到的疼痛的认知,进而影响临床决策。它们还支持了这样一种推测,即女性的非语言疼痛线索可能被低估。