Cognition and the Placebo Effect--Dissociating Subjective Perception and Actual Performance.

The influence of positive or negative expectations on clinical outcomes such as pain relief or motor performance in patients and healthy participants has been extensively investigated for years. Such research promises potential benefit for patient treatment by deliberately using expectations as mean...

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Main Authors: Katharina A Schwarz, Christian Büchel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4493024?pdf=render
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author Katharina A Schwarz
Christian Büchel
author_facet Katharina A Schwarz
Christian Büchel
author_sort Katharina A Schwarz
collection DOAJ
description The influence of positive or negative expectations on clinical outcomes such as pain relief or motor performance in patients and healthy participants has been extensively investigated for years. Such research promises potential benefit for patient treatment by deliberately using expectations as means to stimulate endogenous regulation processes. Especially regarding recent interest and controversies revolving around cognitive enhancement, the question remains whether mere expectancies might also yield enhancing or impairing effects in the cognitive domain, i.e., can we improve or impair cognitive performance simply by creating a strong expectancy in participants about their performance? Moreover, previous literature suggests that especially subjective perception is highly susceptible to expectancy effects, whereas objective measures can be affected in certain domains, but not in others. Does such a dissociation of objective measures and subjective perception also apply to cognitive placebo and nocebo effects? In this study, we sought to investigate whether placebo and nocebo effects can be evoked in cognitive tasks, and whether these effects influence objective and subjective measures alike. To this end, we instructed participants about alleged effects of different tone frequencies (high, intermediate, low) on brain activity and cognitive functions. We paired each tone with specific success rates in a Flanker task paradigm as a preliminary conditioning procedure, adapted from research on placebo hypoalgesia. In a subsequent test phase, we measured reaction times and success rates in different expectancy conditions (placebo, nocebo, and control) and then asked participants how the different tone frequencies affected their performance. Interestingly, we found no effects of expectation on objective measures, but a strong effect on subjective perception, i.e., although actual performance was not affected by expectancy, participants strongly believed that the placebo tone frequency improved their performance.
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spelling doaj.art-18c0ed995a854174b6591e5c9927e4052022-12-21T18:57:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01107e013049210.1371/journal.pone.0130492Cognition and the Placebo Effect--Dissociating Subjective Perception and Actual Performance.Katharina A SchwarzChristian BüchelThe influence of positive or negative expectations on clinical outcomes such as pain relief or motor performance in patients and healthy participants has been extensively investigated for years. Such research promises potential benefit for patient treatment by deliberately using expectations as means to stimulate endogenous regulation processes. Especially regarding recent interest and controversies revolving around cognitive enhancement, the question remains whether mere expectancies might also yield enhancing or impairing effects in the cognitive domain, i.e., can we improve or impair cognitive performance simply by creating a strong expectancy in participants about their performance? Moreover, previous literature suggests that especially subjective perception is highly susceptible to expectancy effects, whereas objective measures can be affected in certain domains, but not in others. Does such a dissociation of objective measures and subjective perception also apply to cognitive placebo and nocebo effects? In this study, we sought to investigate whether placebo and nocebo effects can be evoked in cognitive tasks, and whether these effects influence objective and subjective measures alike. To this end, we instructed participants about alleged effects of different tone frequencies (high, intermediate, low) on brain activity and cognitive functions. We paired each tone with specific success rates in a Flanker task paradigm as a preliminary conditioning procedure, adapted from research on placebo hypoalgesia. In a subsequent test phase, we measured reaction times and success rates in different expectancy conditions (placebo, nocebo, and control) and then asked participants how the different tone frequencies affected their performance. Interestingly, we found no effects of expectation on objective measures, but a strong effect on subjective perception, i.e., although actual performance was not affected by expectancy, participants strongly believed that the placebo tone frequency improved their performance.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4493024?pdf=render
spellingShingle Katharina A Schwarz
Christian Büchel
Cognition and the Placebo Effect--Dissociating Subjective Perception and Actual Performance.
PLoS ONE
title Cognition and the Placebo Effect--Dissociating Subjective Perception and Actual Performance.
title_full Cognition and the Placebo Effect--Dissociating Subjective Perception and Actual Performance.
title_fullStr Cognition and the Placebo Effect--Dissociating Subjective Perception and Actual Performance.
title_full_unstemmed Cognition and the Placebo Effect--Dissociating Subjective Perception and Actual Performance.
title_short Cognition and the Placebo Effect--Dissociating Subjective Perception and Actual Performance.
title_sort cognition and the placebo effect dissociating subjective perception and actual performance
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4493024?pdf=render
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