Cerebral Cortex Advance Access originally published online on July 19, 2006
Cerebral Cortex 2007 17(5):1139-1146; doi:10.1093/cercor/bhl023
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Inner Experience of Pain: Imagination of Pain While Viewing Images Showing Painful Events Forms Subjective Pain Representation in Human Brain
1 Department of Anesthesiology, Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine, 3-39-22 Showamachi, Maebashi 371-8511, Japan, 2 Department of Integrative Physiology, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Myodaiji, Okazaki 444-8585, Japan
Address correspondence to email: mito{at}mito.jrc.or.jp (Hidenori Nemoto) or yogino{at}med.gunma-u.ac.jp (Yuichi Ogino).
Pain is an unpleasant sensation, and at the same time, it is always subjective and affective. Ten healthy subjects viewed 3 counterbalanced blocks of images from the International Affective Picture System: images showing painful events and those evoking emotions of fear and rest. They were instructed to imagine pain in their own body while viewing each image showing a painful event (the imagination of pain). Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we compared cerebral hemodynamic responses during the imagination of pain with those to emotions of fear and rest. The results show that the imagination of pain is associated with increased activity in several brain regions involved in the pain-related neural network, notably the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), right anterior insula, cerebellum, posterior parietal cortex, and secondary somatosensory cortex region, whereas increased activity in the ACC and amygdala is associated with the viewing of images evoking fear. Our results indicate that the imagination of pain even without physical injury engages the cortical representations of the pain-related neural network more specifically than emotions of fear and rest; it also engages the common representation (i.e., in ACC) between the imagination of pain and the emotion of fear.
Key Words: brain emotion fMRI IAPS (International Affective Picture System) pain SII (secondary somatosensory cortex)
![]()
CiteULike
Connotea
Del.icio.us What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
F. Benuzzi, F. Lui, D. Duzzi, P. F. Nichelli, and C. A. Porro Does It Look Painful or Disgusting? Ask Your Parietal and Cingulate Cortex J. Neurosci., January 23, 2008; 28(4): 923 - 931. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
