The experience of pain
100 x 130 x 2.5 cm (h x w x d)

This project addresses the influence of the cognitive regulation strategies acceptance, distraction and reappraisal on experimentally induced pain. To this end, pain-free participants receive heat pain stimuli or electrical stimuli with different stimulus durations. Subjective pain experience as well as psychophysiological pain correlates are gathered. This fundamental research aims at identifying underlying mechanisms in order to optimize pain treatments. The pictures shows a participant rating a heat pain stimulus. (Workgroup: Resilience and Pain)
Photo: Valentina Haspert

Plus de The Center for the History of Psychology presents:

Gustav Kafka (1883-1953)
150 x 100 x 2.5 cm (h x w x d)
The Center for the History of Psychology presents:
Maria Schorn (1894-1968)
120 x 98 x 2.5 cm (h x w x d)
The Center for the History of Psychology presents:
Albert Holden Abbott (1871-1934) and presumably Max Wertheimer (1880-1943)
120 x 140 x 2.5 cm (h x w x d)
The Center for the History of Psychology presents:
Karl and Milly Marbe in the 1930s
120 x 120 x 2.5 cm (h x w x d)
The Center for the History of Psychology presents:
Carl Jesinghaus (1886-1948)
150 x 100 x 2.5 cm (h x w x d)
The Center for the History of Psychology presents: