Extinction with Response Prevention and Spontaneous Recovery Protocols
6:54
Results: Acquisition, Generalization, Extinction and Return of Avoidance, Pain-Related Fear, and Pain-Expectancies
8:17
Conclusion
Transcript
Pain-related avoidance behavior majorly contributes to chronic pain disability. It's existing paradigms often like ecological and construct validity by employing an instructed and low or no cost avoidance response. Our paradigm tackles these limit
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Avoidance is central to chronic pain disability, yet adequate paradigms for examining pain-related avoidance are lacking. Therefore, we developed a paradigm that allows investigating how pain-related avoidance behavior is learned (acquisition), spreads to other stimuli (generalization), can be mitigated (extinction), and how it may subsequently re-emerge (spontaneous recovery).