Stockholm: In a new study led from Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet,
researchers report that people can be conditioned to associate images
with particular pain responses – such as improved tolerance to pain –
even when they are not consciously aware of the images. The findings
are being published in the journal
PNAS
. Previous studies have shown that a
person’s pain experience can be increased or decreased by associating a
specific cue, such as an image, with high or low intensity pain.
However, until now it has been unclear if it is necessary to be
consciously aware of the cue in order to learn the association.
In this
recent study, Dr. Karin Jensen and colleagues tested whether unconscious
learning affected pain responses, by using subliminal images and
training participants to associate a certain image with high pain and
another image with low pain.
The study involved 49 participants in all, randomly assigned
into four experimental groups that would elucidate the impact of
different levels of conscious awareness during the experiment. All
participants were generally healthy, with no chronic illnesses or
psychiatric diagnoses. None of the participants reported receiving any
medication apart from hormonal contraceptives.
In the experiment, images of different faces were presented on a
computer screen. To some of the participants the images were shown so
quickly that they could not be consciously recognized. For each image
exposure, participants were subjected to pain stimulation and asked to
rate the pain according to a specific scale. As each image was
repeatedly associated with either high or low pain, it turned into a
high pain cue or a low pain cue that would affect the participants’
expectations.
The results suggest that pain cues could be learned without
conscious awareness, as participants reported increased pain when shown
the high pain image and reduced pain when shown the low pain image
during identical levels of pain stimulation, regardless of whether or
not the images were shown subliminally,
“These results demonstrate that pain responses can be shaped by
learning that takes place outside conscious awareness, suggesting that
unconscious learning may have an extensive effect on higher cognitive
processes in general”, says Karin Jensen.
This work was funded by the Osher Center for Integrative
Medicine at Karolinska Institutet, and support was also provided by a
NCCIH/NIH Grant. The study was conducted by researchers from the Osher
Center at the Department of Clinical Neuroscience at Karolinska
Institutet, Sweden and from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and
Harvard Medical School, USA.