A distinct inferential mechanism for delusions in schizophrenia.


Journal

Brain : a journal of neurology
ISSN: 1460-2156
Titre abrégé: Brain
Pays: England
ID NLM: 0372537

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 06 2019
Historique:
received: 03 10 2018
revised: 27 12 2018
accepted: 16 01 2019
pubmed: 22 3 2019
medline: 13 3 2020
entrez: 22 3 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Delusions, a core symptom of psychosis, are false beliefs that are rigidly held with strong conviction despite contradictory evidence. Alterations in inferential processes have long been proposed to underlie delusional pathology, but previous attempts to show this have failed to yield compelling evidence for a specific relationship between inferential abnormalities and delusional severity in schizophrenia. Using a novel, incentivized information-sampling task (a modified version of the beads task), alongside well-characterized decision-making tasks, we sought a mechanistic understanding of delusions in a sample of medicated and unmedicated patients with schizophrenia who exhibited a wide range of delusion severity. In this novel task, participants chose whether to draw beads from one of two hidden jars or to guess the identity of the hidden jar, in order to minimize financial loss from a monetary endowment, and concurrently reported their probability estimates for the hidden jar. We found that patients with higher delusion severity exhibited increased information seeking (i.e. increased draws-to-decision behaviour). This increase was highly specific to delusion severity as compared to the severity of other psychotic symptoms, working-memory capacity, and other clinical and socio-demographic characteristics. Delusion-related increases in information seeking were present in unmedicated patients, indicating that they were unlikely due to antipsychotic medication. In addition, after adjusting for delusion severity, patients as a whole exhibited decreased information seeking relative to healthy individuals, a decrease that correlated with lower socioeconomic status. Computational analyses of reported probability estimates further showed that more delusional patients exhibited abnormal belief updating characterized by stronger reliance on prior beliefs formed early in the inferential process, a feature that correlated with increased information seeking in patients. Other decision-making parameters that could have theoretically explained the delusion effects, such as those related to subjective valuation, were uncorrelated with both delusional severity and information seeking among the patients. In turn, we found some preliminary evidence that subjective valuation (rather than belief updating) may explain group differences in information seeking unrelated to delusions. Together, these results suggest that abnormalities in belief updating, characterized by stronger reliance on prior beliefs formed by incorporating information presented earlier in the inferential process, may be a core computational mechanism of delusional ideation in psychosis. Our results thus provide direct empirical support for an inferential mechanism that naturally captures the characteristic rigidity associated with delusional beliefs.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30895299
pii: 5400582
doi: 10.1093/brain/awz051
pmc: PMC6644849
doi:

Substances chimiques

Antipsychotic Agents 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1797-1812

Subventions

Organisme : NIMH NIH HHS
ID : K23 MH101637
Pays : United States
Organisme : NIMH NIH HHS
ID : N01 MH90001
Pays : United States

Commentaires et corrections

Type : CommentIn

Informations de copyright

© The Author(s) (2019). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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Auteurs

Seth C Baker (SC)

Department of Psychiatry, New York State Psychiatric Institute, Columbia University Medical Center, 1051 Riverside Drive, New York, NY, USA.

Anna B Konova (AB)

Department of Psychiatry, University Behavioral Health Care, and Brain Health Institute, Rutgers University - New Brunswick, 671 Hoes Lane West, Piscataway, NJ, USA.

Nathaniel D Daw (ND)

Department of Psychology and Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, South Drive, Princeton, NJ, USA.

Guillermo Horga (G)

Department of Psychiatry, New York State Psychiatric Institute, Columbia University Medical Center, 1051 Riverside Drive, New York, NY, USA.

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