Experimenter audience effects on young adults' facial expressions during pain.

Facial expression has been used as a measure of pain in clinical and experimental studies. The Sociocommunications Model of Pain (T. Hadjistavropoulos, K. Craig, & S. Fuchs-Lacelle, 2004) characterizes facial movements during pain as both expressions of inner experience and communications to oth...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Badali, Melanie
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/785
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-785
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-7852014-03-26T03:34:53Z Experimenter audience effects on young adults' facial expressions during pain. Badali, Melanie Pain Facial expression Experimenter Audience effect Emotion Facial expression has been used as a measure of pain in clinical and experimental studies. The Sociocommunications Model of Pain (T. Hadjistavropoulos, K. Craig, & S. Fuchs-Lacelle, 2004) characterizes facial movements during pain as both expressions of inner experience and communications to other people that must be considered in the social contexts in which they occur. While research demonstrates that specific facial movements may be outward manifestations of pain states, less attention has been paid to the extent to which contextual factors influence facial movements during pain. Experimenters are an inevitable feature of research studies on facial expression during pain and study of their social impact is merited. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effect of experimenter presence on participants’ facial expressions during pain. Healthy young adults (60 males, 60 females) underwent painful stimulation induced by a cold pressor in three social contexts: alone; alone with knowledge of an experimenter watching through a one-way mirror; and face-to-face with an experimenter. Participants provided verbal self-report ratings of pain. Facial behaviours during pain were coded with the Facial Action Coding System (P. Ekman, W. Friesen, & J. Hager, 2002) and rated by naïve judges. Participants’ facial expressions of pain varied with the context of the pain experience condition but not with verbally self-reported levels of pain. Participants who were alone were more likely to display facial actions typically associated with pain than participants who were being observed by an experimenter who was in another room or sitting across from them. Naïve judges appeared to be influenced by these facial expressions as, on average, they rated the participants who were alone as experiencing more pain than those who were observed. Facial expressions shown by people experiencing pain can communicate the fact that they are feeling pain. However, facial expressions can be influenced by factors in the social context such as the presence of an experimenter. The results suggest that facial expressions during pain made by adults should be viewed at least in part as communications, subject to intrapersonal and interpersonal influences, rather than direct read-outs of experience. 2008-04-29T20:44:29Z 2008-04-29T20:44:29Z 2008 2008-04-29T20:44:29Z 2008-05 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/785 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Pain
Facial expression
Experimenter
Audience effect
Emotion
spellingShingle Pain
Facial expression
Experimenter
Audience effect
Emotion
Badali, Melanie
Experimenter audience effects on young adults' facial expressions during pain.
description Facial expression has been used as a measure of pain in clinical and experimental studies. The Sociocommunications Model of Pain (T. Hadjistavropoulos, K. Craig, & S. Fuchs-Lacelle, 2004) characterizes facial movements during pain as both expressions of inner experience and communications to other people that must be considered in the social contexts in which they occur. While research demonstrates that specific facial movements may be outward manifestations of pain states, less attention has been paid to the extent to which contextual factors influence facial movements during pain. Experimenters are an inevitable feature of research studies on facial expression during pain and study of their social impact is merited. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effect of experimenter presence on participants’ facial expressions during pain. Healthy young adults (60 males, 60 females) underwent painful stimulation induced by a cold pressor in three social contexts: alone; alone with knowledge of an experimenter watching through a one-way mirror; and face-to-face with an experimenter. Participants provided verbal self-report ratings of pain. Facial behaviours during pain were coded with the Facial Action Coding System (P. Ekman, W. Friesen, & J. Hager, 2002) and rated by naïve judges. Participants’ facial expressions of pain varied with the context of the pain experience condition but not with verbally self-reported levels of pain. Participants who were alone were more likely to display facial actions typically associated with pain than participants who were being observed by an experimenter who was in another room or sitting across from them. Naïve judges appeared to be influenced by these facial expressions as, on average, they rated the participants who were alone as experiencing more pain than those who were observed. Facial expressions shown by people experiencing pain can communicate the fact that they are feeling pain. However, facial expressions can be influenced by factors in the social context such as the presence of an experimenter. The results suggest that facial expressions during pain made by adults should be viewed at least in part as communications, subject to intrapersonal and interpersonal influences, rather than direct read-outs of experience.
author Badali, Melanie
author_facet Badali, Melanie
author_sort Badali, Melanie
title Experimenter audience effects on young adults' facial expressions during pain.
title_short Experimenter audience effects on young adults' facial expressions during pain.
title_full Experimenter audience effects on young adults' facial expressions during pain.
title_fullStr Experimenter audience effects on young adults' facial expressions during pain.
title_full_unstemmed Experimenter audience effects on young adults' facial expressions during pain.
title_sort experimenter audience effects on young adults' facial expressions during pain.
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/785
work_keys_str_mv AT badalimelanie experimenteraudienceeffectsonyoungadultsfacialexpressionsduringpain
_version_ 1716654993513119744