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Research Shows Anticipating Pain Hurts
Anyone who's ever taken a preschooler to the
doctor knows they often cry more before the shot
than afterward. Now researchers using brain scans
to unravel the biology of dread have an explanation:
For some people, anticipating pain is truly as
bad as experiencing it.
How bad? Among people who volunteered to receive
electric shocks, almost a third opted for a stronger
zap if they could just get it over with, instead
of having to wait.
More importantly, the research found that how
much attention the brain pays to expected pain
determines whether someone is an "extreme dreader"
suggesting that simple diversions could
alleviate the misery.
The research, published Friday in the journal
Science, is part of a burgeoning new field called
neuroeconomics that uses brain imaging to try
to understand how people make choices. Until now,
most of that work has focused on reward, the things
people will do for positive outcomes.
"We were interested in the dark side of the equation,"
explained Dr. Gregory Berns of Emory University,
who led the new study.
"Dread often makes us make bad decisions."
Standard economic theory says that people should
postpone bad outcomes for as long as possible,
because something might happen in the interim
to change improve the outlook.
In real life, the "just get it over with" reaction
is more likely, said Berns, a professor of psychiatry
and behavioral sciences. He offers a personal
example: He usually pays credit card bills as
soon as they arrive instead of waiting until they're
due, even though "it doesn't make any sense economically."
So Berns designed a study to trace dread inside
the brain. He put 32 volunteers into an MRI machine
while giving them a series of 96 electric shocks
to the foot. The shocks varied in intensity, from
barely detectable to the pain of a needle jab.
Participants were told one was coming, how strong
it would be, and how long the wait for it would
be, from 1 to 27 seconds.
Later, participants were given choices: Would
they prefer a medium jolt in 5 seconds or 27 seconds?
What about a mild jolt in 20 seconds vs. a sharp
one in 3 seconds?
When the voltage was identical, the volunteers
almost always chose the shortest wait. But those
Berns dubbed "extreme dreaders" picked the worst
shock if it meant not having to wait as long.
The MRI scans showed that a brain network that
governs how much pain people feel became active
even before they were shocked, particularly the
parts of this "pain matrix" that are linked to
attention but not brain regions involving
fear and anxiety. The more dread bothered someone,
the more attention the pain-sensing parts of the
brain were paying to the wait.
In other words, the mere information that you're
about to feel pain "seems to be a source of misery,"
George Lowenstein, a specialist in economics and
psychology at Carnegie Mellon University, wrote
in an accompanying review of the work.
"These findings support the idea that the decision
to delay or expedite an outcome depends critically
on how a person feels while waiting," Lowenstein
added.
The National Institute on Drug Abuse funded the
research. What's the link between dread and drug
use? It's indirect, but now that scientists know
how healthy people's brains anticipate unpleasant
consequences, future studies can compare how drug
abusers process such information.