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'Emotions can alter how we react to pain'

Washington, Nov 11 (ANI): A new study by Canadian scientists has shown that focusing on a pretty image can ease pain.

According to the study, negative and positive emotions have a direct impact on pain.

"Emotions - or mood - can alter how we react to pain since they're interlinked," says lead author Mathieu Roy, who completed the study as a Universite de Montreal PhD student and is now a post-doctoral fellow at Columbia University.

"Our tests revealed when pain is perceived by our brain and how that pain can be amplified when combined with negative emotions," Roy added.

As part of the study, 13 subjects were recruited to undergo small yet painful electric shocks, which caused knee-jerk reactions controlled by the spine that could be measured.

During the fMRI process, subjects were shown a succession of images that were either pleasant (i.e. summer water-skiing), unpleasant (i.e. a vicious bear) or neutral (i.e. a book). Brain reaction was simultaneously measured in participants through functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).

The fMRI readings allowed the scientists to divide emotion-related brain activity from pain-related reactions.

"We found that seeing unpleasant pictures elicited stronger pain in subjects getting shocks than looking at pleasant pictures," says Dr. Roy.

The discovery provides scientific evidence that pain is governed by mood and builds on Roy's previous studies that showed how pleasant music could decrease aches.

"Our findings show that non-pharmaceutical interventions - mood enhancers such as photography or music - could be used in the healthcare to help alleviate pain. These interventions would be inexpensive and adaptable to several fields," he said.

The study has been published in the latest edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). (ANI)

Now, a robot vacuum cleaner that senses human emotions

London, March 29 (ANI): University of Calgary researchers have announced the invention of a specially-equipped robot vacuum cleaner that can sense human emotions.The scientists say that the Roomba robot vacuum cleaner uses a special headband to capture bioelectric signals from the forehead of a human user, and then infers stress from muscle tension readings.The system involves a control software programme that reinterprets natural muscle tension as estimating the user's stress level, they add."Two distinct robotic behaviours corresponding.....
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