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When More Pain Is Preferred to Less: Adding a Better End
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Citations
10
References
1993
Year
Pain TherapyPain MedicineBehavioral MeasurementAffective NeurosciencePain DiagnosisLong TrialImpulsivityOrthopaedic SurgeryPsychologySocial SciencesPain SyndromeShort TrialPsychophysiologyWater 30Pain ManagementBetter EndMore PainHealth SciencesBehavioral SciencesOutcomes ResearchPreoperative PainExperimental PsychologyExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorPain ResearchPain TreatmentMedicineEmotionTrauma Pain
Subjects were exposed to two aversive experiences: in the short trial, they immersed one hand in water at 14 °C for 60 s; in the long trial, they immersed the other hand at 14 °C for 60 s, then kept the hand in the water 30 s longer as the temperature of the water was gradually raised to 15 °C, still painful but distinctly less so for most subjects. Subjects were later given a choice of which trial to repeat. A significant majority chose to repeat the long trial, apparently preferring more pain over less. The results add to other evidence suggesting that duration plays a small role in retrospective evaluations of aversive experiences; such evaluations are often dominated by the discomfort at the worst and at the final moments of episodes.
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