Guerraz M., Day B. L. Expectation and the vestibular control of balance
// Journal of cognitive neuroscience. 2005. March. Vol. 17. № 3. P. 463–469.Babel M., Russell J. Expectations and speech intelligibility
// The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 2015. May. Vol. 137. № 5. P. 2823–2833.Koyama T., McHaffie J. G., Laurienti P. J., Coghill R. The subjective experience of pain: where expectations become reality
// Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2005. September. Vol. 102. № 36. P. 12950–12955.McClure S. M., Li J., Tomlin D., Cypert K. S., Montague L. M, Montague P. R. Neural correlates of behavioral preference for culturally familiar drinks
// Neuron. 2004. Vol. 44. № 2. P. 379–387.Melzack R., Scott T. H. The effects of early experience on the response to pain
// Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology. 1957. Vol. 50. № 2. P. 155–161.Keltner J., Furst A. J., Fan C., Redfern R. Isolating the modulatory effect of expectation on pain transmission: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study
// The Journal of Neuroscience. 2006. May. Vol. 26. № 16. P. 4437–4443.Torta D., Legrain V., Mouraux A., Valentini E. Attention to pain! A neurocognitive perspective on attentional modulation of pain in neuroimaging studies
// Cortex. 2017. Vol. 89. P. 120–134.Orme-Johnson D. W., Schneider R. H., Son Y. D., Nidich S., Cho Z. H. Neuroimaging of meditation’s effect on brain reactivity to pain
// Neuroreport. 2006. August 21. Vol. 17. № 12. P. 1359–1363.Bausell R., Lao L., Bergman S., Lee W.-L., Berman B. M. Is acupuncture analgesia an expectancy effect? Preliminary evidence based on participants’ perceived assignments in two placebo-controlled trials
// Evaluation & the Health Professions. 2005. Vol. 28. P. 9–26.Colloca L., Lopiano L., Lanotte M., Benedetti F. Overt versus covert treatment for pain, anxiety, and Parkinson’s disease
// The Lancet Neurology. 2004. Vol. 3. № 11. P. 679–684.Benedetti F., Carlino E., Pollo A. Hidden administration of drugs
// Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics. 2011. November. Vol. 90. № 5. P. 651–661.Levine J. D., Gordon N. C., Smith R., Fields R. L. Analgesic responses to morphine and placebo in individuals with postoperative pain
// Pain. 1981. Vol. 10. № 3. P. 379–389.Levine J. D., Gordon N. C. Influence of the method of drug administration on analgesic response
// Nature. 1984. Vol. 312. P. 755–756.Kirsch I., Lynn S. J., Vigorito M., Miller R. R. The role of cognition in classical and operant conditioning
// Journal of Clinical Psychology. 2004. Vol. 60. № 4. P. 369–392.Gracely R. H., Dubner R., Wolskee P. J., Deeter W. R. Placebo and naloxone can alter postsurgical pain by separate mechanisms
// Nature. 1983. Vol. 306. P. 264–265.Lipman J. J., Miller B. E., Mays K. S., Miller M. N., North W. C., Byrne W. L. Peak B endorphin concentration in cerebrospinal fluid: reduced in chronic pain patients and increased during the placebo response
// Psychopharmacology. 1990. September. Vol. 102. № 1. P. 112–116.Benedetti F., Amanzio M., Maggi G. Potentiation of placebo analgesia by proglumide
// Lancet. 1995. Vol. 346. № 8984. P. 1231.Benedetti F., Amanzio M., Thoen W. Disruption of opioid-induced placebo responses by activation of cholecystokinin type-
2 receptors // Psychopharmacology. 2011. Vol. 213. № 4. P. 791–797.Zubieta J. K., Bueller J. A., Jackson L. R. et al. Placebo effects mediated by endogenous opioid activity on mu-opioid receptors
// Journal of Neuroscience. 2005. August 24. Vol. 25. № 34. P. 7754–7762.