The ability to perceive pain is crucial for survival, it can indeed be seen as a warning signal allowing to detect and to react against stimuli that have the potential to inflict tissue damages. But pain is also a major healthcare issue as its treatment constitutes a very problematic challenge for physicians. Because of its aversive quality and its high prevalence, chronic pain affects the quality of life of millions of individuals and imposes a severe financial burden upon our societies. Therefore, progress in understanding the biological, psychological and social mechanisms of pain in humans is not only important for basic research, but also critical for the development of effective strategies for the diagnosis and management of pathological pain conditions.
The objective of our group is to study the neurophysiological mechanisms underlying the cognitive aspects of pain. More specifically, we study the ability of the brain to prioritize the processing of painful stimuli (selective attention), to locate (spatial perception, body representation, multisensory interaction) and to plan actions against them in order to protect the body against physical damages (motor control, nociceptive reflexes). We also investigate how cognitive factors can modulate pain, induce analgesia (hypnosis, cognitive control) and influence nociceptive brain plasticity (central sensitization), in both healthy volunteers and patients (complex regional pain syndrome, fibromyalgia).
Several techniques are used: neurophysiology (electroencephalography, evoked potentials, electromyography, transcranial magnetic stimulation), psychophysics (threshold measurement, mental chronometry) and neuropsychology (congenital blindness, chronic pain, hemispatial neglect, etc.).
Team members
Principal Investigator
Postdoctoral researcher
PhD students
Collaborations
- Health Psychology Lab, Ghent University (Belgium)
- GIGA Consciousness, Université de Liège (Belgium)
- Faculté des Sciences de la Motricité, Université libre de Bruxelles (Belgium)
- Integrative, Multisensory, Perception, Action and Cognition Team, Lyon Neuroscience Research Centre (France)
- Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives et Adaptatives, Université de Strasbourg (France)
- Department of Psychology, University of Bath (United Kingdom)
- Department of Experimental Psychology, Heinrich Heine University Duesseldorf (Germany)
- Department of Human Neuroscience, Sapienza University, Rome (Italy)
- Faculté de Médecine dentaire, Université de Montréal (Canada)
Ongoing Projects
- The Defensive PeriPersonal Space: multisensory interaction (between pain, vision, proprioception and motor control), spatial perception & body representation
- Cognitive control of pain (by attention, executive functions, working memory & hypnosis)
- Cognitive modulation of central sensitization
- Cognitive modulation of spinal activity to somatosensory stimuli
- Pathophysiology and prognosis of Complex Regional Pain Syndrome
- Fibro-Cognition: Assessment of cognitive functions in people with fibromyalgia
Key publications
- Della Porta D., Scheirman E., Legrain V. (2024). Top-down attention does not modulate mechanical hypersensitivity consecutive to central sensitization: Insights from an experimental analysis. Pain, in press.
- Manfron L., Filbrich L., Molitor V., Farnè A., Mouraux A., Legrain V. (2023). Perceptual simultaneity between nociceptive and visual stimuli depends on their spatial congruence. Experimental Brain Research, 241:1785-1796.
- Filbrich L., Kuzminova A., Molitor V., Mouraux D., Berquin A., Barbier O., Libouton X., Legrain V. (2023). Characterizing visuospatial perceptual biases in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome. European Journal of Pain, 27:871-883.
- Legrain V., Filbrich L., Vanderclausen C. (2023). Letter on the pain of the Blind for the use of those who can see their pain. Pain, 164:1451-1456.
- Louis M.H., Meyer C., Legrain V., Berquin A. (2023). Biological and psychological early prognostic factors in complex regional pain syndrome: a systematic review. European Journal of Pain, 27:338-352.