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Questioning the functional significance of the pain matrix

Neuroimaging and neurophysiological studies have shown that transient nociceptive stimuli elicit responses in an extensive cortical network including somatosensory, insular and cingulate areas, as well as frontal and parietal areas. A long-standing view in the field of pain research has been that this network, often referred to as the “pain matrix”, represents the neural activity through which pain emerges as a percept. Recently, we have performed a number of studies challenging this interpretation. First, we conducted a number of experiments showing that pain intensity can be entirely dissociated from the magnitude of the responses in the so-called “pain matrix”, and that the magnitude of the elicited brain responses are strongly influenced by the context within which the stimulus appears, in particular, stimulus novelty. Second, using EEG and fMRI, we showed that non-nociceptive stimuli as well as stimuli not perceived as painful can elicit cortical responses having a spatial distribution that is indistinguishable from that of the “pain matrix”. For these different reasons, we proposed an alternative view of the functional significance of the “pain matrix”, in which it would reflect a system involved in detecting, orientation attention towards, and reacting to the occurrence of salient and/or behaviorally-relevant sensory events. Furthermore, we postulate that this cortical network might represent a basic mechanism through which significant events for the body’s integrity are detected, regardless of the sensory channel through which these events are conveyed.

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Researchers involved

Publications

2013

Bypassing primary sensory cortices - a direct thalamocortical pathway for transmitting salient sensory information

Cerebral Cortex

Liang M, Mouraux A, Iannetti GD.

23(1): 1-11

2013

Novelty is not enough: laser-evoked potentials are determined by stimulus saliency, not absolute novelty

Journal of Neurophysiology

Ronga I, Valentini E, Mouraux A, Iannetti GD.

109(3):692-701

2012

Gamma-band oscillations in the primary somatosensory cortex - a direct and obligatory correlate of subjective pain intensity

Journal of Neuroscience

Zhang ZG, Lu H, Hung YS, Mouraux A, Iannetti GD.

32(22): 7429-38

2012

Dishabituation of laser-evoked EEG responses: dissecting the effect of certain and uncertain changes in stimulus modality

Experimental Brain Research

Torta DM, Liang M, Valentini E, Mouraux A, Iannetti GD.

218(3): 361-72

2011

Parallel processing of nociceptive and non-nociceptive somatosensory information in the human primary and secondary somatosensory cortices: evidence from dynamic causal modelling of fMRI data

Journal of Neuroscience

Liang M, Mouraux A, Iannetti GD.

31(24): 8976-85

2011

Can the fMRI responses to physical pain really tell us why social rejection "hurts"?

PNAS

Mouraux A, Iannetti GD.

108(30): E343

2011

A multisensory investigation of the functional significance of the "pain matrix"

Neuroimage

Mouraux A, Diukova A, Lee MC, Wise RG, Iannetti GD.

54(3):2237-49

2011

The Pain Matrix Reloaded. A Salience Detection System for the Body

Progress in Neurobiology

Legrain V, Iannetti GD, Plaghki L, Mouraux A.

93(1); 111-124

2010

From the Neuromatrix to the Pain Matrix (and back)

Experimental Brain Research

Iannetti GD, Mouraux A.

205(1):1-12

2010

Functional characterisation of sensory ERPs using probabilistic ICA: effect of stimulus modality and stimulus location

Clinical Neurophysiology

Liang M, Mouraux A, Chan V, Blakemore C, Iannetti GD.

121(4):577-87

2009

Nociceptive laser-evoked brain potentials do not reflect nociceptive-specific neural activity

Journal of Neurophysiology

Mouraux A, Iannetti GD.

101(6):3258-3269

2009

Characterizing the cortical activity through which pain emerges from nociception

Journal of Neuroscience

Lee MC*, Mouraux A*, Iannetti GD.

29(24):7909-7916

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