• Pain · Aug 2004

    Comparative Study

    Rapid deterioration of pain sensory-discriminative information in short-term memory.

    • Pierre Rainville, Jean-Charles Doucet, Marie-Chantale Fortin, and Gary H Duncan.
    • Département de Stomatologie, Faculté de Médecine Dentaire, Université de Montréal, CP 6128, Succursale Centre-ville, Montréal, Que. H3C 3J7, Canada. pierre.rainville@umontreal.ca
    • Pain. 2004 Aug 1;110(3):605-15.

    AbstractThe assessment of pain and analgesic efficacy sometimes relies on the retrospective evaluation of pain felt in the immediate, recent or distant past, yet we have a very limited understanding of the processes involved in the encoding, maintenance and intentional retrieval of pain. We examine the properties of the short-term memory of thermal and pain sensation intensity with a delayed-discrimination task using pairs of heat pain, warm and cool stimulation in healthy volunteers. Performance decreased as a function of the inter-stimulus interval (ISI), indicating a robust deterioration of sensory information over the test period of 4-14 s. As expected, performance also decreased with smaller temperature differences (Delta-T) and shorter stimulus durations (6-2 s). The relation between performance and Delta-T was adequately described by a power function, the exponent of which increased linearly with longer ISI. Importantly, performance declined steadily with increasing ISI (from 6 to 14 s)--but only for pairs of heat pain stimuli that were relatively difficult to discriminate (Delta-T < or = 1.0 degree C; perceptual difference < or = 32/100 pain rating units) while no deterioration in performance was observed for the largest temperature difference tested (Delta T = 1.5 degrees C; perceptual difference of 50 units). These results are consistent with the possibility that short-term memory for pain and temperature sensation intensity relies on a transient analog representation that is quickly degraded and transformed into a more resistant but less precise categorical format. This implies that retrospective pain ratings obtained even after very short delays may be rather inaccurate but relatively reliable.

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