How does your brain respond to pain? - Karen D. Davis
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Everyone experiences pain -- but why do some people react to the same painful stimulus in different ways? And what exactly is pain, anyway? Karen D. Davis walks you through your brain on pain, illuminating why the “pain experience” differs from person to person.
Additional Resources for you to Explore
Interested in the theories of pain, dating from the 17th century until modern times? See this article.
Interested in how individual variability in brain circuits are related to mind-wandering from pain? See the original article and discussions in the scientific community Pain Research Forum and in the Health News from NPR.
Interested in learning more about pain treatment and research? The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) mission “brings together scientists, clinicians, health-care providers, and policymakers to stimulate and support the study of pain and to translate that knowledge into improved pain relief worldwide."
The IASP has a task force that develops pain-related terms and their definitions.
We think of pain as a symptom, but there are cases where the nervous system develops feedback loops and pain becomes a terrifying disease in itself. Starting with the story of a girl whose sprained wrist turned into a nightmare, Elliot Krane talks about the complex mystery of chronic pain and reviews the facts we're just learning about how it works and how to treat it.
At any moment, there is an electrical storm coursing through your body. Discover how chemical reactions create an electric current that drives our responses to everything from hot pans to a mother’s caress.
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Meet The Creators
- Educator Karen D. Davis
- Animator Brett Underhill
- Narrator Addison Anderson