Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8623062 Scandinavian Journal of Pain 2017 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
The potential clinical implications of our findings are twofold. First, these results indicate that self-report measures do not always reflect implicit associations between particular movements and threat. Implicit association tasks may help overcome this limitation. Second, a lack of the predicted physiological and behavioural responses may reflect that the visualization of a threatening task by people in pain does not elicit the same physiological defensive responses measured in people with fear of specific objects. It may be necessary to expose the person to the actual movement to elicit threat-responses. Together, these results are consistent with current views of the role of 'fear' in the fear-avoidance model, in which a fear response may only be elicited when the threat is unavoidable.
Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
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