When Photos Are Painkillers..
Looking at a picture of a loved one can dull physical pain
Many mothers offer their young children a hand to squeeze as they  brave a vaccination in the doctor’s office. We instinctively know that  contact with a loved one can help mitigate pain—and  the scientific evidence concurs. Now two recent studies show that a  mere reminder of an absent beloved—a photograph—can deliver the same  relief.
A Psychological Science study in 2009 first showed the  effect. Psychologist Sarah Master of the University California, Los  Angeles, and her colleagues studied 25 women and their boyfriends of  more than six months. The researchers subjected the women to different  degrees of thermal stimulation—a sharp, prickling sensation—as they  either held their boyfriend’s hand while he sat behind a curtain, held  the hand of a male stranger behind a curtain, viewed a photograph of  their boyfriend or viewed a photograph of a male stranger. Holding their  partner’s hand or viewing his photo decreased the women’s pain  significantly more than touching or viewing a stranger—and the photo was  just as effective as the physical contact.
A more recent study in the October issue of PLoS One peered  inside the brain to better understand how love soothes pain.  Neuroscientist Jarred Younger of Stanford University and his colleagues  recruited 15 students who were in the first nine months of a new and  passionate relationship. While lying inside a functional MRI machine,  the participants focused on photographs of their partners or on pictures  of similarly attractive acquaintances, or they played a word  association game. During these distractions, the experimenters applied  mild, medium or painful temperatures to the students’ palms. Images of  attractive acquaintances were not very effective painkillers, but gazing  at the faces of significant others and playing the word game reduced  reported pain on average between 36 and 44 percent and high pain between  12 and 13 percent.
Only photos of loved ones, however, sparked activity in reward  centers within the amygdala, hypothalamus and medial orbitofrontal  cortex. The faces of romantic partners also decreased activity in major  pain-processing areas, such as the left and right posterior insula.  Because the reward centers did not flutter in response to the  distracting word game, the researchers argue that the salve of romantic  affection is not mere distraction—it is a bliss as potent as that of  drugs such as cocaine, which invigorate the same pleasure pathways.
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