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Pain-related gaze biases and later functioning among adults with chronic pain: A longitudinal eye-tracking study
Jackson, Todd1,2; Yang, Zhou1; Su, Lin1
2019-10-01
Source PublicationPain
ISSN0304-3959
Volume160Issue:10Pages:2221-2228
Abstract

In previous studies that examined the impact of attention biases (ABs) on later pain outcomes, reaction times (RTs) in response to brief stimulus presentations had been used as measures of attention. Consequently, little is known about effects of ABs assessed during presentations of cues or biases in prolonged attention towards pain stimuli as influences on subsequent functioning. To address these gaps, 89 adults with chronic pain (68 women, 21 men) engaged in a baseline dot-probe task in which visual attention was tracked during injury-neutral (I-N) image pair presentations as well as a 6-month follow-up reassessing pain intensity and interference from pain. Neither RTs to probes after image pair offsets nor biases in initial orienting of gaze towards injury images predicted follow-up outcomes. However, participants who gazed at injury images for longer durations during I-N trials reported significantly more pain and interference at follow-up than did peers who gazed at injury images for less time, even after the impact of other significant baseline predictors had been controlled. In sum, results provided initial evidence for gaze biases reflecting prolonged vigilance towards pain-related information as a potential risk factor for relative elevations in pain and interference from chronic pain.

KeywordAttention Biases Chronic Pain Eye-tracking Longitudinal Vigilance
DOI10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001614
URLView the original
Language英語English
WOS IDWOS:000512905700007
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85067422535
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Citation statistics
Document TypeJournal article
CollectionUniversity of Macau
Affiliation1.Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality, Southwest University, Chongqing, China
2.Department of Psychology, University of Macau, Taipa, Macao
First Author AffilicationUniversity of Macau
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Jackson, Todd,Yang, Zhou,Su, Lin. Pain-related gaze biases and later functioning among adults with chronic pain: A longitudinal eye-tracking study[J]. Pain, 2019, 160(10), 2221-2228.
APA Jackson, Todd., Yang, Zhou., & Su, Lin (2019). Pain-related gaze biases and later functioning among adults with chronic pain: A longitudinal eye-tracking study. Pain, 160(10), 2221-2228.
MLA Jackson, Todd,et al."Pain-related gaze biases and later functioning among adults with chronic pain: A longitudinal eye-tracking study".Pain 160.10(2019):2221-2228.
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