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Clinical Trial Summary

This experiment aims to examine the effects of social interaction with close others or strangers in virtual reality or through a video-conferencing call, on pain threshold in healthy volunteers in an induced pain task. In a within-subjects study, participants will complete a series of induced-pain heat ramps in four conditions. These conditions are 1. alone in virtual reality 2. with a close friend or family member in virtual reality 3. with a stranger in virtual reality 4. with the same close friend or family member in a video call.


Clinical Trial Description

Some of the earliest clinical uses of virtual reality were as a distractor for patients experiencing pain. However, virtual worlds also allow for social interaction, which has the potential to strongly affect both pain and the sensation of presence in an environment. While social support has been linked to pain reduction, in a recent study, participants who texted with a stranger while undergoing surgery were less likely to require analgesia than those who texted with companions or played a distracting game on their phone. While the authors propose that the context of the chat may have affected participants' pain levels, another additive possibility is that these patients were experiencing social presence with the strangers, who were conversing from a location outside the hospital, and were thus feeling less present in the hospital environment. This might explain why participants received greater benefit from these text conversations than from conversations with loved ones, who were conversing from the hospital environment where their pain occurred. In a previous study, we found that participants in an induced pain task demonstrated higher pain thresholds when they were interacting socially with a stranger compared to when they were alone (Won, Pandita and Kruzan, 2020). In this study, we follow up on these results. First, we aim to replicate the previous finding of social interactions, overall, increasing pain tolerance. Second, we aim to compare the potential effects of interacting with a stranger compared to a "close other," defined as a friend or family member. Third, we compare social interactions in virtual reality compared to video. Fourth, we examine whether cortisol is linked with pain threshold. METHODS AND RESEARCH STRATEGY: Our previous study used 75 participants, and since this is the closest study to our current research design, we will retain this number as our target. We will work with a student sample of convenience. Each participant will experience four conditions in a random order: 1. alone in virtual reality 2. with a close friend or family member in virtual reality 3. with a stranger in virtual reality 4. with the same close friend or family member in a video call. Each condition will take place in a different virtual environment. Participants will be stably seated, and observed by a research assistant, as they experience each condition. During each condition, participants will complete an induced pain task using a Medoc TSA-2001/Model Q-Sense thermode. Prior to experiencing the four experimental conditions, participants will complete a "practice" induced pain task while viewing a different virtual environment. This will allow them to orient themselves to both the virtual environment and the pain task, since based on the pilot experiment, order effects are predicted to be most notable for the first pain task administered. In this and all subsequent induced pain tasks, participants will place their non-dominant hand on the thermode and will be instructed to remove their hand as soon as they feel the temperature has become "painful". The beginning and end of each trial (when the heat ramp begins, and when participants remove their hands) will be noted, and that time duration, and thus the degree of temperature to which it corresponds, will serve as the measure of pain threshold for that trial. In addition to this outcome measure, after each pain trial participants will also fill out a brief self-report survey. These measures will include their self-reported feelings of presence in the virtual environment, and social presence with the other conversational partners. All conditions will be presented in a randomized order to control for order effects. The time to complete these surveys will be approximately 7-10 minutes, which will also allow participants time between each trial to reorient themselves to the real environment, and for any lingering effects of heat on their hands to dissipate. After each survey, 15 minutes after each pain task, a saliva sample for cortisol will be taken. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05335057
Study type Interventional
Source Cornell University
Contact Andrea S Won, PhD
Phone 919-906-0287
Email asw248@cornell.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date October 22, 2021
Completion date December 2022

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