Active Inference, Epistemic Value, and Uncertainty in Conceptual Disorganization in First-Episode Schizophrenia

被引:9
|
作者
Limongi, Roberto [1 ,2 ,8 ]
Silva, Angelica M. [2 ]
Mackinley, Michael [2 ,3 ,4 ]
Ford, Sabrina D. [2 ]
Palaniyappan, Lena [2 ,3 ,4 ,5 ,6 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Univ Western Ontario, Dept Psychol, London, ON, Canada
[2] Robarts Res Inst, London, ON, Canada
[3] Univ Western Ontario, Dept Psychiat, London, ON, Canada
[4] Lawson Hlth Res Inst, London, ON, Canada
[5] Univ Western Ontario, Dept Med Biophys, London, ON, Canada
[6] Univ Western Ontario, Brain & Mind Inst, London, ON, Canada
[7] McGill Univ, Douglas Mental Hlth Univ Inst, Dept Psychiat, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[8] Robarts Res Inst, 1151 Richmond St N, London, ON N6A 5B7, Canada
关键词
thought disorder; bayes network; conceptual organization; free energy principle; dynamic causal models; FORMAL THOUGHT-DISORDER; LANGUAGE; COMMUNICATION; PSYCHOSIS; SYMPTOMS; BRAIN;
D O I
10.1093/schbul/sbac125
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Background and Hypothesis Active inference has become an influential concept in psychopathology. We apply active inference to investigate conceptual disorganization in first-episode schizophrenia. We conceptualize speech production as a decision-making process affected by the latent "conceptual organization"-as a special case of uncertainty about the causes of sensory information. Uncertainty is both minimized via speech production-in which function words index conceptual organization in terms of analytic thinking-and tracked by a domain-general salience network. We hypothesize that analytic thinking depends on conceptual organization. Therefore, conceptual disorganization in schizophrenia would be both indexed by low conceptual organization and reflected in the effective connectivity within the salience network. Study Design With 1-minute speech samples from a picture description task and resting state fMRI from 30 patients and 30 healthy subjects, we employed dynamic causal and probabilistic graphical models to investigate if the effective connectivity of the salience network underwrites conceptual organization. Study Results Low analytic thinking scores index low conceptual organization which affects diagnostic status. The influence of the anterior insula on the anterior cingulate cortex and the self-inhibition within the anterior cingulate cortex are elevated given low conceptual organization (ie, conceptual disorganization). Conclusions Conceptual organization, a construct that explains formal thought disorder, can be modeled in an active inference framework and studied in relation to putative neural substrates of disrupted language in schizophrenia. This provides a critical advance to move away from rating-scale scores to deeper constructs in the pursuit of the pathophysiology of formal thought disorder.
引用
收藏
页码:S115 / S124
页数:10
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