Social exclusion and pain sensitivity: why exclusion sometimes hurts and sometimes numbs.

Michael J Bernstein, Heather M Claypool
Author Information
  1. Michael J Bernstein: Penn State Abington, Abington, PA 19020, USA. mjb70@psu.edu

Abstract

Some research indicates that social exclusion leads to increased emotional- and physical-pain sensitivity, whereas other work indicates that exclusion causes emotional- and physical-pain numbing. This research sought to examine what causes these opposing outcomes. In Study 1, the paradigm used to instantiate social exclusion was found to moderate the social exclusion-physical pain relation: Future-life exclusion led to a numbing of physical pain whereas Cyberball exclusion led to hypersensitivity. Study 2 examined the underlying mechanism, which was hypothesized to be the severity of the "social injury." Participants were subjected to either the standard future-life exclusion manipulation (purported to be a highly severe social injury) or a newly created, less-severe version. Supporting our hypothesis, the standard (highly severe) future-life exclusion led to physical-pain numbing, whereas the less-severe future-life exclusion resulted in hypersensitivity. Implications of these results for understanding the exclusion-pain relation and other exclusion effects are discussed.

MeSH Term

Female
Humans
Male
Pain
Pain Perception
Pain Threshold
Psychological Distance

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0exclusionsocialphysical-painwhereasnumbingpainledfuture-liferesearchindicatesemotional-causesStudyhypersensitivityinjurystandardhighlysevereless-severesometimesleadsincreasedsensitivityworksoughtexamineopposingoutcomes1paradigmusedinstantiatefoundmoderateexclusion-physicalrelation:Future-lifephysicalCyberball2examinedunderlyingmechanismhypothesizedseverity"social"ParticipantssubjectedeithermanipulationpurportednewlycreatedversionSupportinghypothesisresultedImplicationsresultsunderstandingexclusion-painrelationeffectsdiscussedSocialsensitivity:hurtsnumbs

Similar Articles

Cited By (40)