Derksen Suzanne M J C, Konttinen Maria, Myronenko Anastasiia, Seymour Ben, Peerdeman Kaya J
Health, Medical and Neuropsychology, Leiden University, Leiden, the Netherlands.
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Eur J Pain. 2025 Jan;29(1):e4769. doi: 10.1002/ejp.4769.
In Bayesian models including predictive processing, the magnitude and precision of pain expectancies are key determinants of perception. However, relatively few studies have directly tested whether this holds for pain, and results so far have been inconclusive. Here, we investigated expectancy effects on pain experiences and associated affective responses.
In two studies, healthy participants (n = 30 in each) received painful electrical stimuli preceded by explicit pain predictions. In study 1, the magnitude of pain predictions and administered pain intensities were varied. In study 2, the magnitude and precision of pain predictions were varied, while administered pain intensity was kept constant. Experienced pain intensity was the primary outcome in both studies.
Pain experiences assimilated towards both under- and overpredictions of pain. In study 1, however, effects were small, if present at all, for non-painful stimuli and effects were not necessarily larger with predictions of greater magnitude. In study 2, assimilation of pain experiences appeared regardless of precision level, while no significant effects on EMG eyeblink startle responses were observed. Moreover, under- and overpredictions caused disappointment and relief, respectively, with greater disappointment upon precise than imprecise predictions.
The influence of pain predictions on pain might be more complex than assumed in simple instantiations of current theoretical frameworks, with no systematically stronger assimilation of pain experiences to larger and more precise predictions. Since overpredictions are associated with relief, but underpredictions with disappointment, these findings underline the importance of providing correct predictions when preparing for upcoming painful procedures.
Our work supports, challenges, and extends the application of Bayesian and predictive processing frameworks to the influence of pain predictions on pain. Under- and overpredictions of pain yielded assimilation of pain experiences, but assimilation was not systematically stronger with larger prediction errors or greater precision. Moreover, under- and overpredictions resulted in disappointment and relief, respectively. This research signifies the importance of establishing accurate predictions of pain in clinical practice.
在包括预测处理的贝叶斯模型中,疼痛预期的大小和精度是感知的关键决定因素。然而,相对较少的研究直接测试了这是否适用于疼痛,而且迄今为止的结果尚无定论。在此,我们研究了预期对疼痛体验及相关情感反应的影响。
在两项研究中,健康参与者(每项研究n = 30)在接受疼痛性电刺激之前会收到明确的疼痛预测。在研究1中,疼痛预测的大小和施加的疼痛强度有所变化。在研究2中,疼痛预测的大小和精度有所变化,而施加的疼痛强度保持恒定。两项研究中,经历的疼痛强度均为主要结果。
疼痛体验向疼痛的低估和高估方向同化。然而,在研究1中,对于非疼痛性刺激,即便存在效应也很小,而且预测幅度更大时效应不一定更大。在研究2中,无论精度水平如何,疼痛体验的同化均会出现,而对肌电图眨眼惊跳反应未观察到显著影响。此外,低估和高估分别导致失望和缓解,精确预测比不精确预测带来的失望更大。
疼痛预测对疼痛的影响可能比当前理论框架的简单实例所假设的更为复杂,疼痛体验不会系统地更强烈地向更大、更精确的预测同化。由于高估与缓解相关,而低估与失望相关,这些发现强调了在为即将到来的疼痛程序做准备时提供正确预测的重要性。
我们的工作支持、挑战并扩展了贝叶斯和预测处理框架在疼痛预测对疼痛影响方面的应用。疼痛的低估和高估导致了疼痛体验的同化,但同化在更大的预测误差或更高的精度下并非系统地更强。此外,低估和高估分别导致了失望和缓解。这项研究表明在临床实践中建立准确的疼痛预测的重要性。