Research Group Health Psychology, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; Center for Excellence on Generalization Research in Health and Psychopathology, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; Research Group Behavioral Medicine, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland; Centre for Learning and Experimental Psychopathology, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
J Pain. 2018 Jan;19(1):76-87. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2017.09.003. Epub 2017 Oct 6.
The experience of unpredictable pain fluctuations can trigger anticipatory pain-related fear. When discrete predictors for pain are lacking, fear typically accrues to the broader environmental context: a phenomenon referred to as contextual pain-related fear. We examined whether conceptual similarity between discrete contexts facilitates pain-related fear generalization; this mechanism is known as category-level fear generalization. Using a voluntary joystick movement paradigm, pain-free participants performed movements in 2 contexts (within-subjects design); context was manipulated by varying background color screens. In the predictable context, one movement predicted pain and another did not. In the unpredictable context, 2 other movements never predicted pain but pain was unpredictably delivered during the context. Participants subsequently learned to categorize novel background colors (ie, generalization contexts) as being similar to either the unpredictable or predictable pain context. Then we tested fear generalization to these novel contexts. We measured self-reported pain-related fear, expectancy, and eyeblink startle. Results indicated higher pain-related fear reports, but no elevated startle responses, for generalization contexts that were trained to be similar to the original unpredictable context rather than the predictable pain context. This highlights a potential pathway through which neutral contexts can elicit pain-related fear and motivate avoidance behavior associated with chronic pain disability.
Self-reported pain-related fear and expectancy of painful outcome in response to a context associated with unpredictable pain generalizes to perceptually distinct contexts that are trained to be conceptually similar to the unpredictable pain context. Category-level generalization may be a pathway contributing to spreading of fear and avoidance in chronic pain.
不可预测的疼痛波动的体验可能引发预期的与疼痛相关的恐惧。当离散的疼痛预测因素缺乏时,恐惧通常会累积到更广泛的环境背景中:这是一种被称为与环境相关的疼痛恐惧的现象。我们研究了离散环境之间的概念相似性是否有助于与疼痛相关的恐惧泛化;这种机制被称为类别水平的恐惧泛化。使用自愿操纵杆运动范式,无痛参与者在 2 个环境中进行运动(被试内设计);通过改变背景颜色屏幕来操纵环境。在可预测的环境中,一个运动预示着疼痛,而另一个则不预示。在不可预测的环境中,另外两个运动从未预示过疼痛,但在环境中不可预测地出现了疼痛。然后,参与者学习将新的背景颜色(即泛化环境)归类为类似于不可预测或可预测的疼痛环境。然后,我们测试了对这些新环境的恐惧泛化。我们测量了与疼痛相关的恐惧、预期和眨眼反射。结果表明,对于那些被训练为与原始不可预测环境相似而不是可预测疼痛环境相似的泛化环境,参与者报告的与疼痛相关的恐惧更高,但没有引起更高的惊吓反应。这突出了一个潜在的途径,即中性环境可以引发与疼痛相关的恐惧,并激发与慢性疼痛残疾相关的回避行为。
与不可预测的疼痛相关的环境引起的与疼痛相关的恐惧和对疼痛结果的预期会泛化到感知上不同的环境,这些环境被训练为与不可预测的疼痛环境在概念上相似。类别水平的泛化可能是导致慢性疼痛中恐惧和回避扩散的途径之一。