An important clinical implication of our findings is that patients who admit to being unsure about the clinical relevance of their symptoms should not be discredited in the diagnostic process. Uncertainty may be an adequate reaction to symptoms that are often ambiguous in the early stages of a disease. Acknowledging uncertainty is the first step to more detailed sensory processing. Addressing intolerance of uncertainty in patients with medically unexplained symptoms may be beneficial in reducing fear of ambiguous bodily sensations as well as improving somatic decision strategies and classification.
This is one of the first projects to test Bayesian predictive coding theories in the field of interoception. State of the art research in interoception insists mostly on using external criteria such as an ECG in the heartbeat detection task (Domschke et al., 2010). Mapping perception with external measurements, however, means to ignore basic tenets of epistemology. Kant (1787/1998) complained that “it must still remain a scandal to philosophy and to the general human reason to be obliged to assume, as an article of mere belief, the existence of things external to ourselves (from which, yet, we derive the whole material of cognition for the internal sense), and not to be able to oppose a satisfactory proof to any one who may call it in question.” (p.29). He continues later on “For truth or illusory appearance does not reside in the object, in so far as it is intuited, but in the judgement upon the object, in so far as it is thought. It is, therefore, quite correct to say that the senses do not err, not because they always judge correctly, but because they do not judge at all.”(p.205). A model of the body and the body in its environment cannot be an “error”, it can only have a poor predictive value for future stimulation.
Heidegger (1927/1967) commented on Kant that “The 'scandal of philosophy' is not that this proof has yet to be given, but that such proofs are expected and attempted again and again.” (p. 249). We agree with von Helmholtz (1867/1961, p.85) that “Still to many physiologists and psychologists the connection between the sensation and the conception of the object usually appears to be so rigid and obligatory that they are not much disposed to admit that, to a considerable extent at least, it depends on acquired experience, that is, on psychic activity.”
With this project, we have provided further evidence that it is of paramount importance to educate patients, medical professionals, and psychologist that also in the perception of bodily sensations, there is no ‘scandal’ and there is no possible proof. Symptoms have to be accepted on faith because they present a model of the body developed by the brain based on prior experiences, not a measurement of the body by the brain. It is a scandal if patients have the feeling that they need to prove that they are suffering before they can receive help, while, in theory, psychology and philosophy agree that such a proof is impossible as well as irrelevant. This project goes beyond state of the art research and has wider societal implications by developing methods that allow testing perception of the body in a Bayesian framework, respecting the inherently relative nature of perception.