Jan Shriner’s research while affiliated with VA Palo Alto Health Care System and other places

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Publications (1)


The cognitive specificity of associative responses in patients with chronic pain
  • Article

April 2003

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39 Reads

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37 Citations

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Michael E Clark

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Jan Shriner

Previous studies have found evidence of an associative response bias for patients with chronic pain. This body of research is not clear, however, on whether this bias is specific to patients with chronic pain, or whether the bias is specific to pain stimuli or illness/disability stimuli. This is a cross-sectional study involving the comparison of selected groups (chronic pain, acute pain, and medical-staff controls). This study included 80 male participants with chronic pain, 50 male participants with acute pain, and 49 male participants who served as medical staff controls. All participants completed the Beck Depression Inventory, the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, a pain intensity VAS, and the single-word associate homographic response task. Evidence was found for the specificity of pain responses to homographic pain stimuli as the chronic pain group produced more of these responses than the two comparison groups. These findings were seen as providing evidence for an associative response bias. This bias appears specific to pain-related stimuli and reflects the cumulative effects of pain over a period of time.

Citations (1)


... An interpretation bias refers to the tendency to interpret ambiguous information in a negative or threatening manner (Hirsch et al., 2016). To this end, studies demonstrated that patients process ambiguous information in a pain-relevant manner and might interpret vague bodily symptoms negatively (Chan et al., 2020;Edwards & Pearce, 1994;Khatibi et al., 2015;McKellar et al., 2003). While these biases may appear adaptive for individuals, they may contribute to the development and persistence of fearful and catastrophic thinking about pain (Khatibi et al., 2014;Ohman & Mineka, 2001;Vancleef & Peters, 2008). ...

Reference:

Partner-Caregivers’ Interpretation Bias and Sexual Satisfaction: Gender and Congruency in Pain-Related Beliefs
The cognitive specificity of associative responses in patients with chronic pain
  • Citing Article
  • April 2003