1. Analgesia for the Bayesian Brain: How Predictive Coding Offers Insights Into the Subjectivity of Pain.
- Author
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Lersch FE, Frickmann FCS, Urman RD, Burgermeister G, Siercks K, Luedi MM, and Straumann S
- Subjects
- Humans, Bayes Theorem, Brain, Pain drug therapy, Pain Management, Analgesia
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: In order to better treat pain, we must understand its architecture and pathways. Many modulatory approaches of pain management strategies are only poorly understood. This review aims to provide a theoretical framework of pain perception and modulation in order to assist in clinical understanding and research of analgesia and anesthesia., Recent Findings: Limitations of traditional models for pain have driven the application of new data analysis models. The Bayesian principle of predictive coding has found increasing application in neuroscientific research, providing a promising theoretical background for the principles of consciousness and perception. It can be applied to the subjective perception of pain. Pain perception can be viewed as a continuous hierarchical process of bottom-up sensory inputs colliding with top-down modulations and prior experiences, involving multiple cortical and subcortical hubs of the pain matrix. Predictive coding provides a mathematical model for this interplay., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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