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Agency affects pain inference through prior shift as opposed to likelihood precision modulation in a Bayesian pain model

Andreas Strube, Björn Horing, Michael Rose, Christian Büchel

2023Neuron22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Agency and expectations play a crucial role in pain perception and treatment. In the Bayesian pain model, somatosensation (likelihood) and expectations (prior) are weighted by their precision and integrated to form a pain percept (posterior). Combining pain treatment with stimulus-related expectations allows the mechanistic assessment of whether agency enters this model as a shift of the prior or a relaxation of the likelihood precision. In two experiments, heat pain was sham treated either externally or by the subject, while a predictive cue was utilized to create high or low treatment expectations. Both experiments revealed additive effects and greater pain relief under self-treatment and high treatment expectations. Formal model comparisons favored a prior shift rather than a modulation of likelihood precision. Electroencephalography revealed a theta-to-alpha effect, temporally associated with expectations, which was correlated with trial-by-trial pain ratings, further supporting a prior shift through which agency exerts its influence in the Bayesian pain model.

Topics & Concepts

Bayesian probabilityInferenceBayesian inferenceAgency (philosophy)PsychologyMaximum likelihoodBayes' theoremComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceStatisticsMathematicsSociologySocial sciencePain Mechanisms and TreatmentsPain Management and Placebo EffectVeterinary Pharmacology and Anesthesia
Agency affects pain inference through prior shift as opposed to likelihood precision modulation in a Bayesian pain model | Litcius