Mogil Jeffrey S
Department of Psychology and Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Pain. 2015 Apr;156 Suppl 1:S35-S41. doi: 10.1097/01.j.pain.0000460341.62094.77.
The social domain of the biopsychosocial model of pain has been greatly understudied compared with the biological and psychological domains but holds great promise for furthering our understanding, and better treatment, of pain. Recent years have seen an explosion of interest in social neuroscience and have revealed the ability of pain stimuli to alter social interactions. These experiments suggest that rodents are capable of producing simplified versions of any number of social phenomena involving empathy, previously thought to be the sole province of human beings. This review describes the state of science in both humans and nonhuman animals, and notes intriguing parallels in observations from both species. Indeed, my laboratory is starting to demonstrate perfectly translatable findings regarding social modulation of pain in rodents and humans.
与生物和心理领域相比,疼痛的生物心理社会模型中的社会领域研究非常不足,但对于深化我们对疼痛的理解以及改善疼痛治疗具有巨大潜力。近年来,社会神经科学引发了人们极大的兴趣,并揭示了疼痛刺激改变社会互动的能力。这些实验表明,啮齿动物能够产生涉及同理心的多种社会现象的简化版本,而同理心以前被认为是人类独有的。这篇综述描述了人类和非人类动物的科学现状,并指出了两个物种观察结果中有趣的相似之处。事实上,我的实验室开始证明在啮齿动物和人类中关于疼痛的社会调节有完全可转化的发现。