{"id":427,"date":"2023-03-02T20:16:46","date_gmt":"2023-03-02T20:16:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/content.one.lumenlearning.com\/introductiontopsychology\/chapter\/learn-it-perception-of-pain\/"},"modified":"2025-11-13T18:38:26","modified_gmt":"2025-11-13T18:38:26","slug":"learn-it-perception-of-pain","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/content.one.lumenlearning.com\/introductiontopsychology\/chapter\/learn-it-perception-of-pain\/","title":{"raw":"The Other Senses: Learn It 3\u2014Perception of Pain","rendered":"The Other Senses: Learn It 3\u2014Perception of Pain"},"content":{"raw":"<h2 data-type=\"title\">Pain Perception<\/h2>\r\n<p><strong data-start=\"414\" data-end=\"422\">Pain<\/strong> is an unpleasant but essential experience that involves both <strong data-start=\"484\" data-end=\"496\">physical<\/strong> and <strong data-start=\"501\" data-end=\"518\">psychological<\/strong> components. It alerts us to injury, motivates us to protect ourselves, and helps prevent further damage. Although we naturally try to avoid pain, it plays a critical role in survival and adaptation.<\/p>\r\n<p>Generally speaking, pain can be considered to be neuropathic or inflammatory in nature.<\/p>\r\n<section class=\"textbox keyTakeaway\">\r\n<h3>neuropathic and inflammatory pain<\/h3>\r\n<p data-start=\"777\" data-end=\"863\">Pain generally falls into two main categories: <strong data-start=\"824\" data-end=\"840\">inflammatory<\/strong> and <strong data-start=\"845\" data-end=\"860\">neuropathic<\/strong>.<\/p>\r\n<ul data-start=\"865\" data-end=\"1278\">\r\n\t<li data-start=\"865\" data-end=\"1018\">\r\n<p data-start=\"867\" data-end=\"1018\"><strong data-start=\"867\" data-end=\"888\">Inflammatory pain<\/strong> signals <strong data-start=\"897\" data-end=\"928\">tissue damage or irritation<\/strong>\u2014such as a cut, sprain, or infection. It\u2019s a normal part of the body\u2019s healing response.<\/p>\r\n<\/li>\r\n\t<li data-start=\"1019\" data-end=\"1278\">\r\n<p data-start=\"1021\" data-end=\"1278\"><strong data-start=\"1021\" data-end=\"1041\">Neuropathic pain<\/strong> results from <strong data-start=\"1055\" data-end=\"1080\">damage or dysfunction<\/strong> within the nervous system itself (either the peripheral nerves or central pathways). In this case, the brain receives exaggerated or incorrect pain signals, even when no external injury is present.<\/p>\r\n<\/li>\r\n<\/ul>\r\n<\/section>\r\n<h3 data-start=\"1622\" data-end=\"1683\"><strong data-start=\"1626\" data-end=\"1683\">When Pain Is Absent: Congenital Insensitivity to Pain<\/strong><\/h3>\r\n<p data-start=\"1685\" data-end=\"1941\">A very small number of people are born with a rare genetic disorder called <strong data-start=\"1760\" data-end=\"1802\">congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP)<\/strong>, or <strong data-start=\"1807\" data-end=\"1831\">congenital analgesia<\/strong>. Individuals with CIP can feel touch, pressure, and temperature, but they do not experience pain.<\/p>\r\n<p data-start=\"1943\" data-end=\"2373\">As a result, they often sustain serious injuries without realizing it\u2014such as burns, fractures, or self-inflicted wounds. Many children with CIP have mouth and tongue injuries from biting themselves without pain feedback.<\/p>\r\n<p data-start=\"1943\" data-end=\"2373\">Because pain helps prevent further injury, people with CIP often develop chronic damage, infections, and joint problems, leading to shorter life expectancy (U.S. National Library of Medicine, 2013).<\/p>\r\n<section class=\"textbox example\">\r\n<h3>Life Without Pain?<\/h3>\r\n<p>Imagine a life free of pain. How would it be\u2014calm, fearless, serene? Would you feel invulnerable, invincible? Getting rid of pain is a popular quest\u2014a quick search for \u201cpain-free life\u201d on Google returns well over 4 million hits\u2014including links to various bestselling self-help guides promising a pain-free life in only 7 steps, 6 weeks, or 3 minutes. Pain management is a billion-dollar market, and involves much more than just pharmaceuticals. Surely a life with no pain would be a better one?<\/p>\r\n<p>Well, consider one of the \u201clucky few\u201d: 12-year-old \u201cThomas\u201d has never felt deep pain. Not even when a fracture made him walk around with one leg shorter than the other, so that the bones of his healthy leg were slowly crushed to destruction underneath the knee joint. For Thomas and other members of a large Swedish family, life without pain is a harsh reality because of a mutated gene that affects the growth of the nerves conducting deep pain. Most of those affected suffer from joint damage and frequent fractures to bones in their feet and hands; some end up in wheelchairs even before they reach puberty (Minde et al., 2004). It turns out pain\u2014generally\u2014serves us well.<\/p>\r\n<\/section>\r\n<section class=\"textbox linkToLearning\">Watch this <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=1vLsZ_dXFAg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">video of a girl who feels no pain<\/a> to learn more about congenital insensitivity to pain.<\/section>\r\n<section class=\"textbox tryIt\">[ohm2_question height=\"300\"]3999[\/ohm2_question]<\/section>\r\n<section data-depth=\"1\">\r\n<h3 data-start=\"2992\" data-end=\"3023\"><strong data-start=\"2996\" data-end=\"3023\">How Pain Signals Travel<\/strong><\/h3>\r\n<p data-start=\"3025\" data-end=\"3155\">When you step on a pin, your body activates <strong data-start=\"3069\" data-end=\"3084\">nociceptors<\/strong>, specialized sensory receptors for pain. Action potentials in the receptor cells travel as nerve impulses with different speeds. You\u2019ll notice two sensations:<\/p>\r\n<ol>\r\n\t<li data-start=\"3159\" data-end=\"3224\">A sharp, immediate pain, which tells you to move your foot.<\/li>\r\n\t<li data-start=\"3228\" data-end=\"3305\">A dull, aching pain, which lingers to remind you to protect the injury.<\/li>\r\n<\/ol>\r\n<p data-start=\"3307\" data-end=\"3466\">These signals travel along different nerve fibers at different speeds and are processed in separate brain regions. Researchers often distinguish between:<\/p>\r\n<ul>\r\n\t<li data-start=\"3469\" data-end=\"3549\">Sensory\u2013discriminatory pain \u2013 where pain is located and how intense it is.<\/li>\r\n\t<li data-start=\"3552\" data-end=\"3684\">Affective\u2013motivational pain \u2013 how unpleasant it feels and how motivated you are to escape it (Auvray et al., 2010; Price, 2000).<\/li>\r\n<\/ul>\r\n<\/section>\r\n<section class=\"textbox example\">\r\n<h3 data-start=\"3691\" data-end=\"3734\"><strong data-start=\"3695\" data-end=\"3734\">The Brain\u2019s Role in Modulating Pain<\/strong><\/h3>\r\n<p data-start=\"3736\" data-end=\"3824\">Pain perception is not fixed\u2014it is influenced by <strong data-start=\"3785\" data-end=\"3821\">emotion, motivation, and context<\/strong>.<\/p>\r\n\r\nIn April 2003, the climber Aron Ralston found himself at the floor of Blue John Canyon in Utah, forced to make an appalling choice: face a slow but certain death\u2014or amputate his right arm. Five days earlier he fell down the canyon\u2014since then he had been stuck with his right arm trapped between an 800-lb boulder and the steep sandstone wall. Weak from lack of food and water and close to giving up, it occurred to him like an epiphany that if he broke the two bones in his forearm he could manage to cut off the rest with his pocket knife. The thought of freeing himself and surviving made him so excited he spent the next 40 minutes completely engrossed in the task. The pain was unimportant. Only cutting through the main nerve made him stop for a minute\u2014the flood of pain, he describes, was like thrusting his entire arm \u201cinto a cauldron of magma.\u201d Finally free, he rappelled down a cliff and walked another 7 miles until he was rescued by some hikers (Ralston, 2010).<br \/>\r\n<br \/>\r\n<span style=\"font-size: 1rem; text-align: initial;\">How is it possible to do something so excruciatingly painful to yourself, as Aron Ralston did, and still manage to walk, talk, and think rationally afterward? The answer lies within the brain, where signals from the body are interpreted. When we perceive somatosensory and nociceptive signals from the body, the experience is highly subjective and malleable by motivation, attention, emotion, and context.<\/span><\/section>\r\n<h2 id=\"the-motivationdecision-model-and-descending-modulation-of-pain\">Motivation\u2013Decision Model and Descending Modulation of Pain<\/h2>\r\n<section class=\"textbox keyTakeaway\">\r\n<h3>motivation-decision model<\/h3>\r\n<p>According to the <strong>motivation\u2013decision model<\/strong>, the brain automatically and continuously evaluates the pros and cons of any situation\u2014weighing impending threats and available rewards (Fields, 2004, 2006).<\/p>\r\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\r\n<p>Anything more important for survival than avoiding the pain activates the brain\u2019s <strong>descending pain modulatory system<\/strong>\u2014a top-down system involving several parts of the brain and brainstem, which inhibits nociceptive signaling so that the more important actions can be attended to.<\/p>\r\n<\/section>\r\n<p>In Ralston's extreme case, his actions were likely based on such an unconscious decision process\u2014taking into account his homeostatic state (his hunger, thirst, the inflammation and decay of his crushed hand slowly affecting the rest of his body), the sensory input available (the silence around him indicating his solitude), and his knowledge about the threats facing him (death, or excruciating pain that won\u2019t kill him) versus the potential rewards (survival, seeing his family again). Ralston\u2019s story illustrates the evolutionary advantage to being able to shut off pain: the descending pain modulatory system allows us to go through with potentially life-saving actions.<\/p>\r\n<p>However, when one has reached safety or obtained the reward, healing is more important. The very same descending system can then \u201ccrank up\u201d nociception from the body to promote healing and motivate us to avoid potentially painful actions.<\/p>\r\n<p>To facilitate or inhibit nociceptive signals from the body, the <strong>descending pain modulatory system uses a set of ON- or OFF-cells in the brainstem<\/strong>, which regulates how much of the nociceptive signal reaches the brain. The descending system is dependent on opioid signaling, and analgesics like morphine relieve pain via this circuit (Petrovic, Kalso, Petersson, &amp; Ingvar, 2002).<\/p>\r\n<h2 id=\"the-analgesic-power-of-reward\">Analgesic Power of Reward<\/h2>\r\n<p>Thinking about the good things, like his loved ones and the life ahead of him, was probably pivotal to Aron\u2019s survival. The promise of a reward can be enough to relieve pain. Because expecting pain relief is a form of reward this can contribute to\u00a0the placebo effect\u2014where pain relief is due to the brain\u2019s own opioid system (Eippert et al., 2009; Eippert et al.; Levine et al.). Eating tasty food, listening to good music, or feeling pleasant touch on your skin also decreases pain in both animals and humans, presumably through the same mechanism in the brain (Leknes &amp; Tracey, 2008).<\/p>\r\n<section class=\"textbox example\" aria-label=\"Example\">\r\n<h3>Pain for Chocolate<\/h3>\r\n<p>In a now classic experiment, Dum and Herz (1984) either fed rats normal rat food or let them feast on highly rewarding chocolate-covered candy (rats love sweets) while standing on a metal plate until they learned exactly what to expect when placed there. When the plate was heated up to a noxious\/painful level, the rats that expected candy endured the temperature for twice as long as the rats expecting normal chow. Moreover, this effect was completely abolished when the rats\u2019 opioid (endorphin) system was blocked with a drug, indicating that the analgesic effect of reward anticipation was caused by endorphin release.<\/p>\r\n<\/section>\r\n<p>For Aron the climber, both the stress from knowing that death was impending and the anticipation of the reward it would be to survive probably flooded his brain with endorphins, contributing to the wave of excitement and euphoria he experienced while he carried out the amputation \u201clike a five-year-old unleashed on his Christmas presents\u201d (Ralston, 2010). This altered his experience of the pain from the extreme tissue damage he was causing and enabled him to focus on freeing himself. Our brain, it turns out, can modulate the perception of how unpleasant pain is, while still retaining the ability to experience the intensity of the sensation (Rainville, Duncan, Price, Carrier, &amp; Bushnell, 1997; Rainville, Feine, Bushnell, &amp; Duncan, 1992).<\/p>\r\n<p>Social rewards, like holding the hand of your significant other, have pain-reducing effects. Even looking at a picture of them can have similar effects\u2014in fact, seeing a picture of a person we feel close to not only reduces subjective pain ratings, but also the activity in pain-related brain areas (Eisenberger et al., 2011). The most common things to do when wanting to help someone through a painful experience\u2014being present and holding the person\u2019s hand\u2014thus seems to have a measurably positive effect.<\/p>\r\n<h2 id=\"the-power-of-the-mind\">Power of the Mind<\/h2>\r\n<p>The context of pain and touch has a great impact on how we interpret it.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n<p>The relative meaning of pain was illustrated by an experiment where the same moderate heat was rated as either painful, or as pleasant when it provided relief from a more intense pain (Leknes et al., 2013). The interpretation of touch also varies, as knowing who or what is touching us affects our response. Additionally, we can experience pain and pleasure vicariously, as the same brain areas that process these sensations when we experience them ourselves are also active when we observe someone else experiencing them (Singer et al., 2004).<\/p>\r\n<section data-depth=\"1\"><del><\/del>\r\n<section class=\"textbox tryIt\">[ohm2_question height=\"250\"]4026[\/ohm2_question]<\/section>\r\n<\/section>","rendered":"<h2 data-type=\"title\">Pain Perception<\/h2>\n<p><strong data-start=\"414\" data-end=\"422\">Pain<\/strong> is an unpleasant but essential experience that involves both <strong data-start=\"484\" data-end=\"496\">physical<\/strong> and <strong data-start=\"501\" data-end=\"518\">psychological<\/strong> components. It alerts us to injury, motivates us to protect ourselves, and helps prevent further damage. Although we naturally try to avoid pain, it plays a critical role in survival and adaptation.<\/p>\n<p>Generally speaking, pain can be considered to be neuropathic or inflammatory in nature.<\/p>\n<section class=\"textbox keyTakeaway\">\n<h3>neuropathic and inflammatory pain<\/h3>\n<p data-start=\"777\" data-end=\"863\">Pain generally falls into two main categories: <strong data-start=\"824\" data-end=\"840\">inflammatory<\/strong> and <strong data-start=\"845\" data-end=\"860\">neuropathic<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<ul data-start=\"865\" data-end=\"1278\">\n<li data-start=\"865\" data-end=\"1018\">\n<p data-start=\"867\" data-end=\"1018\"><strong data-start=\"867\" data-end=\"888\">Inflammatory pain<\/strong> signals <strong data-start=\"897\" data-end=\"928\">tissue damage or irritation<\/strong>\u2014such as a cut, sprain, or infection. It\u2019s a normal part of the body\u2019s healing response.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"1019\" data-end=\"1278\">\n<p data-start=\"1021\" data-end=\"1278\"><strong data-start=\"1021\" data-end=\"1041\">Neuropathic pain<\/strong> results from <strong data-start=\"1055\" data-end=\"1080\">damage or dysfunction<\/strong> within the nervous system itself (either the peripheral nerves or central pathways). In this case, the brain receives exaggerated or incorrect pain signals, even when no external injury is present.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/section>\n<h3 data-start=\"1622\" data-end=\"1683\"><strong data-start=\"1626\" data-end=\"1683\">When Pain Is Absent: Congenital Insensitivity to Pain<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p data-start=\"1685\" data-end=\"1941\">A very small number of people are born with a rare genetic disorder called <strong data-start=\"1760\" data-end=\"1802\">congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP)<\/strong>, or <strong data-start=\"1807\" data-end=\"1831\">congenital analgesia<\/strong>. Individuals with CIP can feel touch, pressure, and temperature, but they do not experience pain.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"1943\" data-end=\"2373\">As a result, they often sustain serious injuries without realizing it\u2014such as burns, fractures, or self-inflicted wounds. Many children with CIP have mouth and tongue injuries from biting themselves without pain feedback.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"1943\" data-end=\"2373\">Because pain helps prevent further injury, people with CIP often develop chronic damage, infections, and joint problems, leading to shorter life expectancy (U.S. National Library of Medicine, 2013).<\/p>\n<section class=\"textbox example\">\n<h3>Life Without Pain?<\/h3>\n<p>Imagine a life free of pain. How would it be\u2014calm, fearless, serene? Would you feel invulnerable, invincible? Getting rid of pain is a popular quest\u2014a quick search for \u201cpain-free life\u201d on Google returns well over 4 million hits\u2014including links to various bestselling self-help guides promising a pain-free life in only 7 steps, 6 weeks, or 3 minutes. Pain management is a billion-dollar market, and involves much more than just pharmaceuticals. Surely a life with no pain would be a better one?<\/p>\n<p>Well, consider one of the \u201clucky few\u201d: 12-year-old \u201cThomas\u201d has never felt deep pain. Not even when a fracture made him walk around with one leg shorter than the other, so that the bones of his healthy leg were slowly crushed to destruction underneath the knee joint. For Thomas and other members of a large Swedish family, life without pain is a harsh reality because of a mutated gene that affects the growth of the nerves conducting deep pain. Most of those affected suffer from joint damage and frequent fractures to bones in their feet and hands; some end up in wheelchairs even before they reach puberty (Minde et al., 2004). It turns out pain\u2014generally\u2014serves us well.<\/p>\n<\/section>\n<section class=\"textbox linkToLearning\">Watch this <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=1vLsZ_dXFAg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">video of a girl who feels no pain<\/a> to learn more about congenital insensitivity to pain.<\/section>\n<section class=\"textbox tryIt\"><iframe loading=\"lazy\" id=\"ohm3999\" class=\"resizable\" src=\"https:\/\/ohm.one.lumenlearning.com\/multiembedq.php?id=3999&theme=lumen&iframe_resize_id=ohm3999&source=tnh&show_question_numbers\" width=\"100%\" height=\"300\"><\/iframe><\/section>\n<section data-depth=\"1\">\n<h3 data-start=\"2992\" data-end=\"3023\"><strong data-start=\"2996\" data-end=\"3023\">How Pain Signals Travel<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p data-start=\"3025\" data-end=\"3155\">When you step on a pin, your body activates <strong data-start=\"3069\" data-end=\"3084\">nociceptors<\/strong>, specialized sensory receptors for pain. Action potentials in the receptor cells travel as nerve impulses with different speeds. You\u2019ll notice two sensations:<\/p>\n<ol>\n<li data-start=\"3159\" data-end=\"3224\">A sharp, immediate pain, which tells you to move your foot.<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"3228\" data-end=\"3305\">A dull, aching pain, which lingers to remind you to protect the injury.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p data-start=\"3307\" data-end=\"3466\">These signals travel along different nerve fibers at different speeds and are processed in separate brain regions. Researchers often distinguish between:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li data-start=\"3469\" data-end=\"3549\">Sensory\u2013discriminatory pain \u2013 where pain is located and how intense it is.<\/li>\n<li data-start=\"3552\" data-end=\"3684\">Affective\u2013motivational pain \u2013 how unpleasant it feels and how motivated you are to escape it (Auvray et al., 2010; Price, 2000).<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/section>\n<section class=\"textbox example\">\n<h3 data-start=\"3691\" data-end=\"3734\"><strong data-start=\"3695\" data-end=\"3734\">The Brain\u2019s Role in Modulating Pain<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p data-start=\"3736\" data-end=\"3824\">Pain perception is not fixed\u2014it is influenced by <strong data-start=\"3785\" data-end=\"3821\">emotion, motivation, and context<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p>In April 2003, the climber Aron Ralston found himself at the floor of Blue John Canyon in Utah, forced to make an appalling choice: face a slow but certain death\u2014or amputate his right arm. Five days earlier he fell down the canyon\u2014since then he had been stuck with his right arm trapped between an 800-lb boulder and the steep sandstone wall. Weak from lack of food and water and close to giving up, it occurred to him like an epiphany that if he broke the two bones in his forearm he could manage to cut off the rest with his pocket knife. The thought of freeing himself and surviving made him so excited he spent the next 40 minutes completely engrossed in the task. The pain was unimportant. Only cutting through the main nerve made him stop for a minute\u2014the flood of pain, he describes, was like thrusting his entire arm \u201cinto a cauldron of magma.\u201d Finally free, he rappelled down a cliff and walked another 7 miles until he was rescued by some hikers (Ralston, 2010).<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 1rem; text-align: initial;\">How is it possible to do something so excruciatingly painful to yourself, as Aron Ralston did, and still manage to walk, talk, and think rationally afterward? The answer lies within the brain, where signals from the body are interpreted. When we perceive somatosensory and nociceptive signals from the body, the experience is highly subjective and malleable by motivation, attention, emotion, and context.<\/span><\/section>\n<h2 id=\"the-motivationdecision-model-and-descending-modulation-of-pain\">Motivation\u2013Decision Model and Descending Modulation of Pain<\/h2>\n<section class=\"textbox keyTakeaway\">\n<h3>motivation-decision model<\/h3>\n<p>According to the <strong>motivation\u2013decision model<\/strong>, the brain automatically and continuously evaluates the pros and cons of any situation\u2014weighing impending threats and available rewards (Fields, 2004, 2006).<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Anything more important for survival than avoiding the pain activates the brain\u2019s <strong>descending pain modulatory system<\/strong>\u2014a top-down system involving several parts of the brain and brainstem, which inhibits nociceptive signaling so that the more important actions can be attended to.<\/p>\n<\/section>\n<p>In Ralston&#8217;s extreme case, his actions were likely based on such an unconscious decision process\u2014taking into account his homeostatic state (his hunger, thirst, the inflammation and decay of his crushed hand slowly affecting the rest of his body), the sensory input available (the silence around him indicating his solitude), and his knowledge about the threats facing him (death, or excruciating pain that won\u2019t kill him) versus the potential rewards (survival, seeing his family again). Ralston\u2019s story illustrates the evolutionary advantage to being able to shut off pain: the descending pain modulatory system allows us to go through with potentially life-saving actions.<\/p>\n<p>However, when one has reached safety or obtained the reward, healing is more important. The very same descending system can then \u201ccrank up\u201d nociception from the body to promote healing and motivate us to avoid potentially painful actions.<\/p>\n<p>To facilitate or inhibit nociceptive signals from the body, the <strong>descending pain modulatory system uses a set of ON- or OFF-cells in the brainstem<\/strong>, which regulates how much of the nociceptive signal reaches the brain. The descending system is dependent on opioid signaling, and analgesics like morphine relieve pain via this circuit (Petrovic, Kalso, Petersson, &amp; Ingvar, 2002).<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"the-analgesic-power-of-reward\">Analgesic Power of Reward<\/h2>\n<p>Thinking about the good things, like his loved ones and the life ahead of him, was probably pivotal to Aron\u2019s survival. The promise of a reward can be enough to relieve pain. Because expecting pain relief is a form of reward this can contribute to\u00a0the placebo effect\u2014where pain relief is due to the brain\u2019s own opioid system (Eippert et al., 2009; Eippert et al.; Levine et al.). Eating tasty food, listening to good music, or feeling pleasant touch on your skin also decreases pain in both animals and humans, presumably through the same mechanism in the brain (Leknes &amp; Tracey, 2008).<\/p>\n<section class=\"textbox example\" aria-label=\"Example\">\n<h3>Pain for Chocolate<\/h3>\n<p>In a now classic experiment, Dum and Herz (1984) either fed rats normal rat food or let them feast on highly rewarding chocolate-covered candy (rats love sweets) while standing on a metal plate until they learned exactly what to expect when placed there. When the plate was heated up to a noxious\/painful level, the rats that expected candy endured the temperature for twice as long as the rats expecting normal chow. Moreover, this effect was completely abolished when the rats\u2019 opioid (endorphin) system was blocked with a drug, indicating that the analgesic effect of reward anticipation was caused by endorphin release.<\/p>\n<\/section>\n<p>For Aron the climber, both the stress from knowing that death was impending and the anticipation of the reward it would be to survive probably flooded his brain with endorphins, contributing to the wave of excitement and euphoria he experienced while he carried out the amputation \u201clike a five-year-old unleashed on his Christmas presents\u201d (Ralston, 2010). This altered his experience of the pain from the extreme tissue damage he was causing and enabled him to focus on freeing himself. Our brain, it turns out, can modulate the perception of how unpleasant pain is, while still retaining the ability to experience the intensity of the sensation (Rainville, Duncan, Price, Carrier, &amp; Bushnell, 1997; Rainville, Feine, Bushnell, &amp; Duncan, 1992).<\/p>\n<p>Social rewards, like holding the hand of your significant other, have pain-reducing effects. Even looking at a picture of them can have similar effects\u2014in fact, seeing a picture of a person we feel close to not only reduces subjective pain ratings, but also the activity in pain-related brain areas (Eisenberger et al., 2011). The most common things to do when wanting to help someone through a painful experience\u2014being present and holding the person\u2019s hand\u2014thus seems to have a measurably positive effect.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"the-power-of-the-mind\">Power of the Mind<\/h2>\n<p>The context of pain and touch has a great impact on how we interpret it.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>The relative meaning of pain was illustrated by an experiment where the same moderate heat was rated as either painful, or as pleasant when it provided relief from a more intense pain (Leknes et al., 2013). The interpretation of touch also varies, as knowing who or what is touching us affects our response. Additionally, we can experience pain and pleasure vicariously, as the same brain areas that process these sensations when we experience them ourselves are also active when we observe someone else experiencing them (Singer et al., 2004).<\/p>\n<section data-depth=\"1\"><del><\/del><\/p>\n<section class=\"textbox tryIt\"><iframe loading=\"lazy\" id=\"ohm4026\" class=\"resizable\" src=\"https:\/\/ohm.one.lumenlearning.com\/multiembedq.php?id=4026&theme=lumen&iframe_resize_id=ohm4026&source=tnh&show_question_numbers\" width=\"100%\" height=\"250\"><\/iframe><\/section>\n<\/section>\n","protected":false},"author":20,"menu_order":25,"template":"","meta":{"_candela_citation":"[{\"type\":\"cc\",\"description\":\"The Other Senses\",\"author\":\"OpenStax College\",\"organization\":\"\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/openstax.org\/books\/psychology-2e\/pages\/5-5-the-other-senses\",\"project\":\"\",\"license\":\"cc-by\",\"license_terms\":\"Access for free at https:\/\/openstax.org\/books\/psychology-2e\/pages\/1-introduction\"},{\"type\":\"cc\",\"description\":\"Touch and Pain, information on mechanoreceptors through the power of the mind\",\"author\":\"Guro E. 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