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  1. 27 déc. 2023 · Stigmatizing language can impede patient receptivity to pain care modalities that might benefit them. To deny that words matter risks denial of the consequences of language in constructing social norms, perceptions of reality, and the social meanings of objects.

  2. How is the universal, yet private and subjective, experience of pain talked about by different people in everyday encounters? What does the analysis of pain-related lexico-phraseological choices, grammatical structures, and linguistic metaphors reveal as to how pain is perceived and experienced? Are pain utterances primarily used to express or ...

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  3. 2 déc. 2015 · Given how important language can be to pain sufferers, well-trained clinicians go to some lengths to use appropriate terms. We can spot patients at higher risk of disability by carefully...

  4. 19 avr. 2023 · In this paper, we empirically investigate the folk concept of pain by examining how people understand first-person pain reports, such as ‘I have a pain in my arm.’ More specifically, our objective is to identify content that is semantically encoded as part of the concept of pain and content that is only conversationally ...

  5. 17 mars 2021 · A better understanding of pain language may engender a shared understanding between people with chronic pain and health professionals and aid communication. This study suggests there are specific linguistic markers (in the form of metaphor type) for certain diagnoses and pain related outcomes, such as pain interference. The metaphors ...

  6. 1 mars 1995 · Using arguments developed by Ludwig Wittgenstein concerning the relation between pain and language, the author contends that pain experience, as well as pain expression, is mediated by the conceptual structure of our common language. As conceptual, pain remains subjective but becomes an essentially social phenomenon. This implies ...

  7. 9 nov. 2021 · There are no magic words to make pain disappear, but pain experts say that paying attention to the words we use for pain might help shape how we experience it. Changing languages changes pain.