Using physiological signals to objectively measure pain in cold pressor task

Pain measurement is currently performed through a psychological response scale, such as the visual analogue scale (VAS). More and more articles show us the feasibility of using objective signals to reduce the abuse of drugs by using physiological signals for objective pain me...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20382852
id ndltd-NEU--neu-m046qg71b
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-NEU--neu-m046qg71b2021-05-28T05:21:23ZUsing physiological signals to objectively measure pain in cold pressor taskPain measurement is currently performed through a psychological response scale, such as the visual analogue scale (VAS). More and more articles show us the feasibility of using objective signals to reduce the abuse of drugs by using physiological signals for objective pain measurement. We performed ice water pain experiments in a laboratory environment to understand the physiological signals that individuals exhibit when they receive pain. Blood pressure (BP), Blood Volume Pulse (BVP), Electromyography (EMG), Respiration Rate (RR), Skin Conductance (SC), Skin Temperature (ST) were measured. Analysis of variance was performed to determine whether subjects were painless, Whether the state is significantly different from the pain state. Based on our conclusion, skin conductance, blood pressure, respiration rate, and skin temperature signals were good signals for the classification of chronic pain.--Author's abstracthttp://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20382852
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description Pain measurement is currently performed through a psychological response scale, such as the visual analogue scale (VAS). More and more articles show us the feasibility of using objective signals to reduce the abuse of drugs by using physiological signals for objective pain measurement. We performed ice water pain experiments in a laboratory environment to understand the physiological signals that individuals exhibit when they receive pain. Blood pressure (BP), Blood Volume Pulse (BVP), Electromyography (EMG), Respiration Rate (RR), Skin Conductance (SC), Skin Temperature (ST) were measured. Analysis of variance was performed to determine whether subjects were painless, Whether the state is significantly different from the pain state. Based on our conclusion, skin conductance, blood pressure, respiration rate, and skin temperature signals were good signals for the classification of chronic pain.--Author's abstract
title Using physiological signals to objectively measure pain in cold pressor task
spellingShingle Using physiological signals to objectively measure pain in cold pressor task
title_short Using physiological signals to objectively measure pain in cold pressor task
title_full Using physiological signals to objectively measure pain in cold pressor task
title_fullStr Using physiological signals to objectively measure pain in cold pressor task
title_full_unstemmed Using physiological signals to objectively measure pain in cold pressor task
title_sort using physiological signals to objectively measure pain in cold pressor task
publishDate
url http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20382852
_version_ 1719407535690088448