Radboud University hosted a conference on 11th and 12th June 2025 examining the interplay between the study of epistemic injustice and the debates on expertise by experience in mental healthcare. This is a brief report of some of the talks presented on the first day of the conference.
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From the poster of the event |
Roy Dings (one of the organisers together with Linde van Schuppen and Derek Strijbos) kicked off the event with a brief introduction to the motivation for a more in-depth analysis of experiential knowledge.
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Roy Dings on experiential knowledge |
First keynote talk was by philosopher of science and psychiatry Şerife Tekin. She started her presentation discussing sources of knowledge in psychiatry, including intervention-oriented science, clinical practices, cognitive science research, and self-related resources (self-reports). Self-related phenomena have been traditionally undermined.
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Şerife Tekin and the cover of her new book |
Tekin argued that one problem is that the self has not been considered a legitimate topic of psychiatric investigation and this suggests that studying the self is not scientific. Another problem is that self reports are considered to be unrealiable due to the wide presence of biases and confabulation. Next, there are concerns about internet self diagnosis (what Tekin calls the TikTok problem) as some people see their entire identity as defined by the diagnosis they have and this does not offer insight into their own specific experiences. Finally, there is an objectivity problem: it is often thought that self reports are subjective and don't deliver the type of knowledge we need.
Tekin proposed a new model to represent the various facets of the self in experiential experience (physical, social, conceptual, narrative, and experiential). This model is a model of the patient that can offer responses to all the challenges usually faced by experiential knowledge. Even if self reports by themselves have epistemic limitations, it is by engaging with such reports that we make progress with understanding what people are going through.
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Dings on the Attuned Responsiveness framework |
The next talk was by Roy Dings and Derek Strijbos. They started asking what an expert by experience can contribute: what is unique and valuable about their contribution. Dings observed that it is not easy to be explicit about what it is that we should add to experiential knowledge to obtain expertise. So he developed with Strijbos a new framework called Attuned Responsiveness. One element is responsiveness: things matter to different people in different ways (what we notice and why) and a number of factors can be relevant (biology, culture, experience, self-reflection).
The other element is attunement: this is about being responsive to other people's responsiveness (being open) and about being active (making an effort to bridge dissimilarities in responsiveness by asking questions). Attunement is a core aspect of everyday social expertise but between people with lived experience there may be fewer dissimilarities. So we should include people with lived experience in psychiatric knowledge because they notice the right things and find the right words.
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Strijbos on how to reconcile different types of expertise |
Strijbos argued that experiential knowledge is not just knowledge of one's own experience. It is the acquisition of perceptual and agential skills that bring epistemic benefits and have an impact on how one addresses problems. What experience does is increase attuned responsiveness, in a way that would be hard or impossible to achieve in other ways (with more depth and detail). This framework can also explain and help tackle conflict among experts: different experts can be responsive to different aspects of a situation.
After lunch, Themistoklis Pantazakos presented on the scope of epistemic injustice in psychiatry and discussed the debates about whether the construct is useful when applied to interactions between healthcare professionals and mental health patients. There is a lot of push back against the overapplication of the notion of epistemic injustice to the mental healthcare context, based on criticism about some cases that are considered paradigmatic.
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Pantazakos on the debate on testimonial injustice |
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Miguel Núñez de Prado presenting at the conference |
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Lubomira Radoilska on the zetetic model |
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Slide on empathy by Julian Kiverstein |