Pain intensity ratings are subject to various cognitive modulations - yet the mechanisms underlying this influence are still not understood. In a conditioning protocol, pain-related expectations were induced through pairing predefined movements with a noxious or innocuous stimulus in either a predictable or unpredictable fashion. Healthy volunteers (N = 37) categorized the stimuli as either painful or nonpainful and rated its perceived intensity. Using a Hierarchical Drift Diffusion model based on the categorization data, we found that an a priori decision-making bias evolved toward the expected sensations (P < .001). In particular, our findings suggest that differences in both the amount of decision-making bias (P = .004) and the speed ...