MGH Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging 2016 | Page 28

new insights into the brain Does It Hurt? It May Depend On The Context We checked in with postdoctoral fellow Dan-Mikael Ellingsen about his work with the neurophysiology of touch. Here’s what we learned. Among the questions he’s seeking to address: How do expectations and social context shape the ways in which we experience touch and pain? “I did my PhD in neurophysiology at the Univ. of Gothenburg, Sweden,” he said, “in a research group that has a strong foundation in the neurophysiology of touch—especially affective and social touch. As I learned more about the neuroscience of affect and pain, I soon realized that, despite the fascinating ‘bottom-up’ system of skin fibers that detect and transmit touch information to the brain, I was more Dan-Mikael Ellingsen interested in how these affective experiences are shaped by ‘top-down’ influences, such as expectations and contextual meaning (e.g., an identical touch stimulus can be pleasant The Martinos Center seemed a or unpleasant depending on expec- natural fit for his interests, not least because of its strong work in tations, who is touching, etc.). the area of pain “I did some experiments with healthy volunteers, investigating “Besides the methodological experplacebo effects on pleasant touch tise at the Center, I was attracted to versus pain, and cross-sensory in- the Center for Integrative Pain Neufluences between affective visual roImaging (CiPNI) led by Dr. Vitaly (emotional faces) and tactile (dif- Napadow. I found their research in ferent types of touch), using tech- basic and clinical pain neuroimagniques such as fMRI, pupillometry, ing very innovative. And they also HRV and pharmacological manipu- collaborate closely with a broader network of placebo researchers in lation with oxytocin.” Boston (PIPS), which opened up valuable collaborations for me.” He is putting real doctors and pain patients in adjoining MRI scanners—at the same time—so he can study how they interact “During my PhD studies, I became increasingly fascinated by the profound effects the therapeutic relationship can have on health outcomes. At Martinos, I am working on a project to understand the processes in the brains of clinicians and patients, during the therapeutic interaction, which leads to such placebo-like clinical improvement. To investigate this, we have real clinicians and pain patients positioned in two different MRI scanners while they can interact ‘face-to-face’ via a video / audio link. While in the scanners, they participate in an experimental proxy of a clinical treatment encounter, where the clinician is allowed to use a device to relieve the patient of experimentally applied pain. All this goes on while we record brain and autonomic activity of both participants simultaneously (often called ‘hyperscanning’).”