Individualized Pain Responses Unveiled through Brain Scans
Originally Published 2 years ago — by Neuroscience News

Researchers have found that everyone's brain has a unique 'pain fingerprint' that varies from person to person, with significant differences in the timing, frequency, and location of gamma oscillations - brain waves linked to pain perception. Some individuals showed no gamma waves at all. The pattern of individual gamma responses was found to be stable over time, pointing towards the existence of individual 'pain fingerprints'. This research underscores the extreme variability of pain response among individuals and suggests the potential to identify individual 'pain fingerprints'.