Dildine Troy C, Amir Carolyn M, Parsons Julie, Atlas Lauren Y
10, Center Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, National Institutes of Health.
171 77 Solna, Sweden Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute.
Affect Sci. 2023 Mar 3;4(2):350-369. doi: 10.1007/s42761-023-00181-6. eCollection 2023 Jun.
Inequities in pain assessment are well-documented; however, the psychological mechanisms underlying such biases are poorly understood. We investigated potential perceptual biases in the judgments of faces displaying pain-related movements. Across five online studies, 956 adult participants viewed images of computer-generated faces ("targets") that varied in features related to race (Black and White) and gender (women and men). Target identity was manipulated across participants, and each target had equivalent facial movements that displayed varying intensities of movement in facial action-units related to pain (Studies 1-4) or pain and emotion (Study 5). On each trial, participants provided categorical judgments as to whether a target was in pain (Studies 1-4) or which expression the target displayed (Study 5) and then rated the perceived intensity of the expression. Meta-analyses of Studies 1-4 revealed that movement intensity was positively associated with both categorizing a trial as painful and perceived pain intensity. Target race and gender did not consistently affect pain-related judgments, contrary to well-documented clinical inequities. In Study 5, in which pain was equally likely relative to other emotions, pain was the least frequently selected emotion (5%). Our results suggest that perceivers can utilize facial movements to evaluate pain in other individuals, but perceiving pain may depend on contextual factors. Furthermore, assessments of computer-generated, pain-related facial movements online do not replicate sociocultural biases observed in the clinic. These findings provide a foundation for future studies comparing CGI and real images of pain and emphasize the need for further work on the relationship between pain and emotion.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s42761-023-00181-6.
疼痛评估中的不平等现象有充分的文献记载;然而,此类偏差背后的心理机制却鲜为人知。我们调查了在判断显示与疼痛相关动作的面部时潜在的感知偏差。在五项在线研究中,956名成年参与者观看了计算机生成的面部图像(“目标”),这些面部在与种族(黑人和白人)和性别(女性和男性)相关的特征上有所不同。目标身份在参与者之间进行了操纵,每个目标都有同等的面部动作,这些动作在与疼痛相关的面部动作单元(研究1 - 4)或疼痛和情绪(研究5)中显示出不同强度的运动。在每次试验中,参与者对目标是否处于疼痛状态(研究1 - 4)或目标显示的表情(研究5)进行分类判断,然后对表情的感知强度进行评分。对研究1 - 4的荟萃分析表明,运动强度与将试验分类为疼痛以及感知到的疼痛强度均呈正相关。与有充分文献记载的临床不平等现象相反,目标种族和性别并未始终如一地影响与疼痛相关的判断。在研究5中,与其他情绪相比,疼痛出现的可能性相同,但疼痛是最不常被选择的情绪(5%)。我们的结果表明,感知者可以利用面部动作来评估他人的疼痛,但感知疼痛可能取决于情境因素。此外,在线对计算机生成的、与疼痛相关的面部动作的评估并未重现临床中观察到的社会文化偏差。这些发现为未来比较计算机生成图像(CGI)和疼痛真实图像的研究奠定了基础,并强调了进一步研究疼痛与情绪之间关系的必要性。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s42761 - 023 - 00181 - 6获取的补充材料。