I think the sensor your refering to is a MAP sensor (Manifold Absolute Pressure). most turbo charged cars run them, its how the car reads boost and Vac in the manifold then adjusts the N75 to the required duty cycle for the requested boost versus the actual boost.
Alot of people think that as our cars use a MAF sensor for fuelling that there isnt a MAP sensor, but as far as I'm aware this isnt the case.
What garage did you go to and what diagnostic equipment did they use ? Map sensor readings can be very confusing as the read pressure needs to go through a calculation to take into account the fact that when at sea level there is already a pressure reading of 14.6psi, for example 0psi on your boost gauge would actually already be 14.6psi as that is what the standard air pressure at sea level is.
I once had a dashdaq, and when set to read boost it gave very confusing results as the boost gauge would show one reading and the dashdaq another. This was solved by an equation that had to be manually input to suit the standard air pressure in your region.
If the diagnostic equipment that was used by the garage gave ACTUAL readings it is quite possible that it would seem that they were miles out.
Its just a thought, not saying theres not a fault with it just want to check before you go pulling sensors that are not faulty.