Summary information

Study title

Placebo-like analgesia via response imagery

Creator

K.J. Peerdeman (Leiden University)

Study number / PID

doi:10.17026/dans-2a9-4qwg (DOI)

easy-dataset:121461 (DANS-KNAW)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

Data files accompanying the paper: Peerdeman, K.J., van Laarhoven, A.I.M., Bartels, D.J.P., Peters, M.L., & Evers, A.W.M. (2017). Placebo-like analgesia via response imagery. European Journal of Pain, 21, 1366–1377. doi: 10.1002/ejp.1035.

Paper abstract:
Background: Placebo effects on pain are reliably observed in the literature. A core mechanism of these effects is response expectancies. Response expectancies can be formed by instructions, prior experiences and observation of others. Whether mental imagery of a response can also induce placebo-like expectancy effects on pain has not yet been studied systematically.
Methods: In Study 1, 80 healthy participants were randomly allocated to (i) response imagery or (ii) control imagery. In Study 2, 135 healthy participants were randomly allocated to (i) response imagery with a verbal suggestion regarding its effectiveness, (ii) response imagery only, or (iii) no intervention. In both studies, expected and experienced pain during cold pressor tests were measured pre- and post-intervention, along with psychological and physiological measures.
Results: Participants rated pain as less intense after response imagery than after control imagery in Study 1 (p = 0.044, g2p = 0.054) and as less intense after response imagery (with or without verbal suggestion) than after no imagery in Study 2 (p < 0.001, g2p = 0.154). Adding a verbal suggestion did not affect pain (p = 0.068, g2p = 0.038). The effects of response imagery on experienced pain were mediated by expected pain.
Conclusions: Thus, in line with research on placebo effects, the current findings indicate that response imagery can induce analgesia, via its effects on response expectancies.


see readme.pdf

Topics

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Methodology

Data collection period

Not available

Country

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

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Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

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Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

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Funding information

Funder

NWO

Grant number

452-09-015

Access

Publisher

DANS Data Station Social Sciences and Humanities

Publication year

2019

Terms of data access

Not available

Related publications

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