학술논문

In-group reassurance in a pain setting produces lower levels of physiological arousal: direct support for a self-categorization analysis of social influence.
Document Type
Article
Source
European Journal of Social Psychology. Jul/Aug2007, Vol. 37 Issue 4, p649-660. 12p. 1 Graph.
Subject
*PAIN
*SOCIAL influence
*EMOTIONS
*PAIN management
*SENSES
*SOCIAL pressure
*SOCIAL bonds
*SOCIALIZATION
*SOCIAL psychology
Language
ISSN
0046-2772
Abstract
A large body of research demonstrates a strong social component to people's pain experiences and pain-related behaviours. We investigate this by examining the impact of social-influence processes on laboratory-induced pain responses by manipulating the social-categorical relationship between the person experiencing pain and another who offers reassurance. We show that physiological arousal associated with laboratory-induced pain is significantly lower in normal, healthy participants following reassurance about the pain-inducing activity when that reassurance comes from an in-group member in contrast to reassurance from an out-group member and a no reassurance control. These data are consistent with predictions derived from self-categorization theory, providing convincing empirical support of its analysis of social influence using a non-reactive measure. These data also represent a clear advance within the pain literature by identifying a possible common process to the social-psychological component of pain responses. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]