Publication | Closed Access
Alone but feeling no pain: Effects of social exclusion on physical pain tolerance and pain threshold, affective forecasting, and interpersonal empathy.
515
Citations
80
References
2006
Year
Social IsolationPain DisordersPain MedicineSocial PsychologyEmpathyAffective NeuroscienceLonelinessSocial ExclusionEmotional NumbnessPsychologyEmotional PainAffective ScienceSocial SciencesEmotional ResponseEmotion RegulationAffective ForecastingSocial SufferingPain ManagementHealth SciencesBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryApplied Social PsychologySocial StressPsychosocial ResearchPain ResearchPhysical PainPhysical Pain ToleranceEmotionAdaptive Emotion
Prior findings of emotional numbness (rather than distress) among socially excluded persons led the authors to investigate whether exclusion causes a far-reaching insensitivity to both physical and emotional pain. Experiments 1-4 showed that receiving an ostensibly diagnostic forecast of a lonesome future life reduced sensitivity to physical pain, as indicated by both (higher) thresholds and tolerance. Exclusion also caused emotional insensitivity, as indicated by reductions in affective forecasting of joy or woe over a future football outcome (Experiment 3), as well as lesser empathizing with another person's suffering from either romantic breakup (Experiment 4) or a broken leg (Experiment 5). The insensitivities to pain and emotion were highly intercorrelated.
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