Discriminability of electrocutaneous stimuli after topical anesthesia: Detection-theory measurement of sensitivity to painful stimuli

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Abstract

In three experiments on the psychophysical measurement of pain, electrocutaneous currents were applied to the volar surface of the forearm. In the first experiment, a conventional category scaling method was compared with the rating method of signal detection. The results of both methods were analyzed in detection-theory terms to derive receiver operating characteric curves and measures of the discriminability of adjacent currents. The rating method yielded larger discriminability values than the category scale did, and that method was therefore used in the subsequent experiments to examine the effect of a topical anesthetic on discriminability. When the stimuli were applied through surface electrodes, no effect of the topical anesthetic on discriminability was found, but when the stimuli were applied to a more localized area by intradermal needle electrodes, a dose-dependent effect of the anesthetic on discriminability occurred. For this experiment, the slope of the cumulative sensitivity function increased with increasing elapsed time since the removal of the anesthetic. This result is congruent with the theory that discriminability can serve as a measure of sensitivity to painful stimuli. © 1994 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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APA

Irwin, R. J., Hautus, M. J., Dawson, N. J., Welch, D., & Bayly, M. F. (1994). Discriminability of electrocutaneous stimuli after topical anesthesia: Detection-theory measurement of sensitivity to painful stimuli. Perception & Psychophysics, 55(2), 125–132. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03211660

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