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1. Heightened affective response to perturbation of respiratory but not pain signals in eating, mood, and anxiety disorders.

2. Sleep Problems Mediate the Relationship Between Psychosocial Stress and Pain Facilitation in Native Americans: A Structural Equation Modeling Analysis from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

3. The Relationship Between Experienced Discrimination and Pronociceptive Processes in Native Americans: Results From the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

5. The role of self-evaluated pain sensitivity as a mediator of objectively measured pain tolerance in Native Americans: findings from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

6. Modulation of the nociceptive flexion reflex by conservative therapy in patients and healthy people: a systematic review and meta-analysis

7. Psychosocial and cardiometabolic predictors of chronic pain onset in Native Americans: serial mediation analyses of 2-year prospective data from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

8. Sleep Buffers the Effect of Discrimination on Cardiometabolic Allostatic Load in Native Americans: Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

9. Reply to ‘Imbalance of threat and soothing systems in fibromyalgia: rephrasing an established mechanistic model?’

10. Reply to: Hypothetical model ignores many important pathophysiologic mechanisms in fibromyalgia

13. A qualitative analysis of pain meaning: results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

14. Examining Configural, Metric, and Scalar Invariance of the Pain Catastrophizing Scale in Native American and Non-Hispanic White Adults in the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

15. Contributors

16. Adverse life events, sensitization of spinal nociception, and chronic pain risk

17. Exploration of the trait-activation model of pain catastrophizing in Native Americans: results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American pain risk (OK-SNAP)

18. Assessing peripheral fibers, pain sensitivity, central sensitization, and descending inhibition in Native Americans: main findings from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

19. Conditioned Pain Modulation in Sexual Assault Survivors

20. The impact of exposure, relaxation, and rescripting therapy for post‐trauma nightmares on suicidal ideation

21. Sensory, Affective, and Catastrophizing Reactions to Multiple Stimulus Modalities: Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

22. Anger Inhibition and Pain Modulation

23. Are cardiometabolic markers of allostatic load associated with pronociceptive processes in Native Americans?: A structural equation modeling analysis from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

24. Does Threat Enlarge Nociceptive Reflex Receptive Fields?

25. The relationship between adverse life events and endogenous inhibition of pain and spinal nociception: Findings from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

26. Sleep Buffers the Effect of Discrimination on Cardiometabolic Allostatic Load in Native Americans: Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

27. The association between adverse life events, psychological stress, and pain-promoting affect and cognitions in Native Americans: Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

28. The relationship between sleep quality and emotional modulation of spinal, supraspinal, and perceptual measures of pain

31. The role of self-evaluated pain sensitivity as a mediator of objectively measured pain tolerance in Native Americans: findings from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

32. An Updated Overview of the Neurophysiological and Psychosocial Dimensions of Fibromyalgia – A Call for an Integrative Model

33. Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation of the Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex Alters Emotional Modulation of Spinal Nociception

34. The Effect of Pain Catastrophizing on Endogenous Inhibition of Pain and Spinal Nociception in Native Americans: Results From the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

35. Heightened affective response to perturbation of respiratory but not pain signals in eating, mood, and anxiety disorders

36. Emotional Modulation of Pain and Spinal Nociception in Sexual Assault Survivors

37. Latent variable analysis of negative affect and its contributions to neural responses during shock anticipation

38. Pilot study: Brief posttrauma nightmare treatment for persons with bipolar disorder

39. Interoception and Mental Health: A Roadmap

40. Behavioral Inhibition and Behavioral Activation are Related to Habituation of Nociceptive Flexion Reflex, but Not Pain Ratings

41. Pain-related anxiety promotes pronociceptive processes in Native Americans: bootstrapped mediation analyses from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

42. Impairment of Inhibition of Trigeminal Nociception via Conditioned Pain Modulation in Persons with Migraine Headaches

43. A Possible Source of Heterogeneity in Nociceptive Flexion Reflex (NFR) Threshold Among Patients with Fibromyalgia: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

44. Race/Ethnicity Does Not Moderate the Relationship Between Adverse Life Experiences and Temporal Summation of the Nociceptive Flexion Reflex and Pain: Results From the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

45. (265) The Relationship between Discrimination and Pain Tolerance and its Potential Mediation by Stress: Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

46. (268) Blood Pressure as a Prospective Predictor of Chronic Pain Development: Results from Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

47. (261) Does Anger Inhibition Alter Pain Modulation?

48. Experimental reduction of pain catastrophizing modulates pain report but not spinal nociception as verified by mediation analyses

49. Nociceptive Processing in Women With Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)

50. Is anger management style associated with descending modulation of spinal nociception?

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