From the Department of Health Psychology (Zaman, Claes, Van Diest, Vlaeyen) and Center for the Psychology of Learning and Experimental Psychopathology (Zaman), Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; Centre for Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain (FMRIB) (Wiech) and Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences (Wiech), Nuffield Division Anaesthetics, University of Oxford, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK; Tumi Therapeutics (Claes), De Lobbert, Heusden-Zolder, Germany; Laboratory for Brain-Gut Axis Studies (LaBGAS) (Van Oudenhove), Translational Research Centre for Gastrointestinal Disorders (TARGID), Department of Chronic Diseases, Metabolism, and Ageing, KU Leuven; Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry (Van Oudenhove), University Psychiatric Centre KU Leuven, Campus Gasthuisberg, Leuven, Belgium; and Department Clinical Psychological Science (Vlaeyen), Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands.
Psychosom Med. 2018 Nov/Dec;80(9):836-844. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000586.
The extent to which pain-related expectations, known to affect pain perception, also affect perception of nonpainful sensations remains unclear, as well as the potential role of unpredictability in this context.
In a proprioceptive fear conditioning paradigm, various arm extension movements were associated with predictable and unpredictable electrocutaneous pain or its absence. During a subsequent test phase, nonpainful electrocutaneous stimuli with a high or low intensity were presented during movement execution. We used hierarchical drift diffusion modeling to examine the influence of expecting pain on the perceptual decision-making process underlying intensity perception of nonpainful sensations. In the first experiment (n = 36), the pain stimulus was never presented during the test phase after conditioning. In the second experiment (n = 39), partial reinforcement was adopted to prevent extinction of pain expectations.
In both experiments, movements that were associated with (un)predictable pain led to higher pain expectancy, self-reported fear, unpleasantness, and arousal as compared with movements that were never paired with pain (effect sizes η2 ranging from 0.119 to 0.557; all p values < .05). Only in the second experiment-when the threat of pain remained present-we found that the expectation of pain affected decision making. Compared with the no pain condition, an a priori decision-making bias toward the high-intensity decision threshold was found with the strongest bias during unpredictable pain (effect sizes η2 ranging from 0.469 to 0.504; all p-values < .001).
Thus, the expectation of pain affects inferential processes not only for subsequent painful but also for nonpainful bodily stimuli, with unpredictability moderating these effects, and only when the threat of pain remains present due to partial reinforcement.
尽管已知疼痛相关的预期会影响疼痛感知,但它们是否也会影响对非疼痛感觉的感知尚不清楚,以及在这种情况下不可预测性的潜在作用。
在本体感受性恐惧条件反射范式中,各种手臂伸展运动与可预测和不可预测的电触觉疼痛或其不存在相关联。在随后的测试阶段,在执行运动时会呈现具有高或低强度的非疼痛性电触觉刺激。我们使用分层漂移扩散建模来检查对疼痛的预期对非疼痛感觉强度感知的感知决策过程的影响。在第一个实验(n=36)中,在条件反射后的测试阶段从未呈现疼痛刺激。在第二个实验(n=39)中,采用部分强化来防止疼痛预期的消退。
在两个实验中,与(不)可预测性疼痛相关联的运动导致较高的疼痛预期、自我报告的恐惧、不愉快和唤醒,与从未与疼痛配对的运动相比(效应大小 η2 范围从 0.119 到 0.557;所有 p 值均<.05)。只有在第二个实验中——当疼痛的威胁仍然存在时——我们发现疼痛的预期会影响决策。与无疼痛条件相比,在存在高、低强度的决策阈值时,提前做出决策的偏向会向高强度决策阈值倾斜,在不可预测的疼痛时,偏向最强(效应大小 η2 范围从 0.469 到 0.504;所有 p 值均<.001)。
因此,疼痛的预期不仅会影响后续疼痛性的推断过程,而且会影响非疼痛性的身体刺激,不可预测性会调节这些影响,而且只有在由于部分强化而导致疼痛的威胁仍然存在时才会出现这些影响。