Abstract

Topical research efforts on attention to pain often take a critical look at the modulatory role of top-down factors. For instance, it has been shown that the fearful expectation of pain at a location of the body directs attention towards that body part. In addition, motivated attempts to control this pain were found to modulate this prioritization effect. Such studies have often used a temporal order judgment task, requiring participants to judge the order in which two stimuli are presented by indicating which one they perceived first. As this constitutes a forced-choice response format, such studies may be subject to response bias. The aim of the current study was to address this concern. We used a ternary synchrony judgment paradigm, in which participants judged the order in which two somatosensory stimuli occurred. Critically, participants now also had the option to give a ‘simultaneous’ response when they did not perceive a difference. This way we eliminated the need for guessing, and thus reduced the risk of response bias. One location was threatened with the possibility of pain in half of the trials, as predicted by an auditory cue. Additionally, half of the participants (pain control group) were encouraged to avoid pain stimuli by executing a quick button press. The other half (comparison group) performed a similar action, albeit unrelated to the occurrence of pain. Our data did not support threat-induced spatial prioritization, nor did we find evidence that pain control attempts influenced attention in any way.

Highlights

  • In a recent surge of research endeavors, pain has been investigated as part of a motivational setting [1,2,3]

  • It was found that the expectation of pain directed attention towards a currently threatened location, but the inclusion of pain control attempts generalized this prioritization to safe situations [6]

  • One participant’s data did not yield a model suitable to obtain a midpoint PSS measurement, due to a noticeable lack of Sresponses. This participant was omitted from further analyses

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Summary

Introduction

In a recent surge of research endeavors, pain has been investigated as part of a motivational setting [1,2,3]. Case in point, expecting pain to occur on a location of the body has been shown to direct attention towards that location. It was found that the expectation of pain directed attention towards a currently threatened location, but the inclusion of pain control attempts generalized this prioritization to safe situations [6]. Encouraging participants to avoid pain was found to be a critical component of threat-induced attentional prioritization of somatosensory information, when presented in competition with visual input [10]. The sum of these results clearly underpins the value of modeling active goal pursuit in experimental settings

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