AI Article Synopsis

  • Traditional expert consensus methods for classifying psychopathology have limitations, prompting a shift towards quantitative and empirical classification efforts.
  • Research shows that psychopathology is more dimensional than categorical, supporting the idea of continuity rather than discrete categories, and illustrates a hierarchical organization of symptoms.
  • The HiTOP Consortium, consisting of 70 researchers, focuses on the empirical organization of psychopathology, exploring connections with personality, developing new models, and creating assessment tools based on these findings.

Article Abstract

Shortcomings of approaches to classifying psychopathology based on expert consensus have given rise to contemporary efforts to classify psychopathology quantitatively. In this paper, we review progress in achieving a quantitative and empirical classification of psychopathology. A substantial empirical literature indicates that psychopathology is generally more dimensional than categorical. When the discreteness versus continuity of psychopathology is treated as a research question, as opposed to being decided as a matter of tradition, the evidence clearly supports the hypothesis of continuity. In addition, a related body of literature shows how psychopathology dimensions can be arranged in a hierarchy, ranging from very broad "spectrum level" dimensions, to specific and narrow clusters of symptoms. In this way, a quantitative approach solves the "problem of comorbidity" by explicitly modeling patterns of co-occurrence among signs and symptoms within a detailed and variegated hierarchy of dimensional concepts with direct clinical utility. Indeed, extensive evidence pertaining to the dimensional and hierarchical structure of psychopathology has led to the formation of the Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP) Consortium. This is a group of 70 investigators working together to study empirical classification of psychopathology. In this paper, we describe the aims and current foci of the HiTOP Consortium. These aims pertain to continued research on the empirical organization of psychopathology; the connection between personality and psychopathology; the utility of empirically based psychopathology constructs in both research and the clinic; and the development of novel and comprehensive models and corresponding assessment instruments for psychopathology constructs derived from an empirical approach.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6172695PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/wps.20566DOI Listing

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