Avoiding Based on Shades of Gray: Generalization of Pain-Related Avoidance Behavior to Novel Contexts - 02/12/20
, Mathijs Franssen *, Janne Claes *Highlights |
• | Excessive avoidance or avoiding in the absence of actual threat fosters disability. |
• | Context modulates the acquisition of pain-related avoidance behavior. |
• | Context also modulates differential acquisition of pain-expectancy and pain-related fear. |
• | There is partial support for selective avoidance generalization to similar contexts. |
• | Differential pain-expectancy and pain-related fear generalized to similar contexts. |
Abstract |
Avoidance behavior is protective, yet in the absence of genuine bodily threat, it may become disabling. Therefore, we investigated whether avoidance generalizes to novel safe contexts based on the similarity with the acquisition context.
Healthy participants performed arm movements using a robotic arm to reach a target. Three trajectories (T1-3) led to the target. During acquisition, a painful stimulus could be partly/completely prevented by performing more effortful trajectories (ie, longer and more force needed), T2/T3, in the pain-avoidance context (eg, black background); in the yoked context (eg, white background), the same reinforcement schedule was applied irrespective of the chosen trajectories. Generalization of avoidance was tested in 2 novel contexts (eg, shades of gray backgrounds). We assessed self-reported pain-expectancy and pain-related fear for all trajectories, and avoidance behavior (ie, maximal deviation from T1).
Results confirm that fear and expectancy ratings reflect the response-outcome contingencies and differential learning selectively generalized to the novel context resembling the original pain-avoidance context. Furthermore, a linear trend in avoidance behavior across contexts emerged, which is indicative of a generalization gradient. Participants avoided more in the context resembling the original pain-avoidance context than in the one resembling the yoked context, but this effect was not statistically significant.
Perspective |
Perspective: We demonstrated acquisition of pain-related avoidance behavior in a within-subjects design, showing modulation of pain-related fear and pain-expectancy by context and providing limited evidence that avoidance selectively generalizes to novel, similar contexts. These results provide insight regarding the underlying mechanisms of the spreading of protective behavior in chronic pain patients.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key Words : Generalization, Avoidance, Operant learning, Context, Conditioning, Robotic arm
Plan
| Disclosures: Ann Meulders is a postdoctoral researcher of the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO-Vlaanderen), Belgium, (grant ID 12E3717N) and is supported by a Vidi grant from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), The Netherlands (grant ID 452-17-002). The authors have no conflicts to report. |
Vol 21 - N° 11-12
P. 1212-1223 - novembre 2020 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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