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  1. 19 apr 2023 · What is pain? In the philosophical tradition, this question has received a rather univocal answer. For example, according to Lewis ( 1980: 222), ‘Pain is a feeling. Surely that is uncontroversial. To have pain and to feel pain are one and the same.’. This understanding of pain also appears to prevail in the medical sciences.

  2. 9 nov 2021 · There are no magic words to make pain disappear, but pain experts say that paying attention to the words we use for pain might help shape how we experience it. Changing languages changes...

    • Cameron Walker
  3. 27 dic 2023 · Stigmatizing language can impede patient receptivity to pain care modalities that might benefit them. To deny that words matter risks denial of the consequences of language in constructing social norms, perceptions of reality, and the social meanings of objects.

  4. 25 mar 2024 · Pain is that complex response of the brain that often can only be best expressed in the emotion of song or poetry. No one is going to write a song to nociception.

  5. 30 nov 2020 · Here, we investigated how language and cultural identification influence pain report and physiological responses within Spanish–English bilinguals. We used thermal stimulations to evoke pain and recorded mean skin conductance response amplitude (mSCRa) as a measure of physiological arousal.

    • Morgan Gianola, Maria M. Llabre, Elizabeth A. Reynolds Losin
    • 2021
  6. 30 giu 2018 · Despite an increasing awareness of the importance of psychological factors, and of the potent influence that language has on individual pain perceptions, musculoskeletal practice can be a minefield of threatening words and ambiguous information.

  7. 29 giu 2018 · Introduction. May words be painful? Undoubtedly yes and in several respects, as literary sources, personal experience, and a handful of recent behavioral and brain-imaging studies have shown (e.g., [ 1 – 3 ]).