Contingency Learning Deficits and Generalization in Chronic Unilateral Hand Pain Patients |
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Authors: | Ann Meulders Daniel S. Harvie Jane K. Bowering Suzanne Caragianis Johan W.S. Vlaeyen G. Lorimer Moseley |
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Affiliation: | ∗ Research Group on Health Psychology, University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium;† Center for Excellence on Generalization in Health and Psychopathology, University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium;‡ Sansom Institute for Health Research, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia;§ SA Hand Therapy, Daw Park/Mawson Lakes, South Australia, Australia;|| Department of Clinical Psychological Science, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands |
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Abstract: | Contingency learning, in particular the formation of danger beliefs, underpins conditioned fear and avoidance behavior, yet equally important is the formation of safety beliefs. That is, when threat beliefs and accompanying fear/avoidance spread to technically safe cues, it might cause disability. Indeed, such overgeneralization has been advanced as a transdiagnostic pathologic marker, but it has not been investigated in chronic pain. Using a novel hand pain scenario contingency learning task, we tested the hypotheses that chronic hand pain patients demonstrate less differential pain expectancy judgments because of poor safety learning and demonstrate broader generalization gradients than healthy controls. Participants viewed digitized 3-dimensional hands in different postures presented in random order (conditioned stimulus [CS]) and rated the likelihood that a fictive patient would feel pain when moving the hand into that posture. Subsequently, the outcome (pain/no pain) was presented on the screen. One hand posture was followed by pain (CS+), another was not (CS−). Generalization was tested using novel hand postures (generalization stimuli) that varied in how similar they were to the original conditioned stimuli. Patients, but not healthy controls, demonstrated a contingency learning deficit determined by impaired safety learning, but not by exaggerated pain expectancy toward the CS+. Patients showed flatter, asymmetric generalization gradients than the healthy controls did, with higher pain expectancy for novel postures that were more similar to the original CS−. The results clearly uphold our hypotheses and suggest that contingency learning deficits might be important in the development and maintenance of the chronic pain–related disability. |
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Keywords: | Generalization hand pain chronic pain unconditioned stimulus&ndash expectancy contingency learning |
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