Will it hurt? Uncertainty makes painful events much more unpleasant, scientists say
Not knowing if a decision will provoke pain is more stressful than correctly anticipating the outcome, even when that outcome hurts like hell, according to a study released Tuesday.
Moreover, experiments with volunteers receiving electric shocks showed that the greater the stress, the better subjects were at reading available clues to figure out the right response.
“People whose stress tracks uncertainty more accurately are better at predicting when they’re going to get a shock,” said Archy de Berker, a scientist at the Institute of Neurology at University College London and lead author of the study.
Published in Nature Communications, the research suggests that stress - which corresponds to the activation of specific chemicals in the brain - can help us navigate risk in some situations.
Scientists have long understood that uncertainty, in itself, can cause anxiety.
Classic experiments with rats subjected to arbitrary electric shocks showed that stress levels dropped when the animals were able to anticipate or control the timing of the jolts.