Paranoia as a deficit in non-social belief updating.

Elife

Department of Psychiatry, Connecticut Mental Health Center, Yale University, New Have, United States.

Published: May 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Paranoia involves the belief that others intend harm, often influenced by social pressures and uncertainty in changing environments.
  • Research indicates that paranoid individuals show a heightened sensitivity to perceived environmental changes and a stronger inclination to expect volatility in uncertain situations.
  • Using reversal learning tasks in humans and methamphetamine-exposed rats, the study highlights fundamental learning differences in paranoia, suggesting that uncertainty impacts belief-updating processes across different species.

Article Abstract

Paranoia is the belief that harm is intended by others. It may arise from selective pressures to infer and avoid social threats, particularly in ambiguous or changing circumstances. We propose that uncertainty may be sufficient to elicit learning differences in paranoid individuals, without social threat. We used reversal learning behavior and computational modeling to estimate belief updating across individuals with and without mental illness, online participants, and rats chronically exposed to methamphetamine, an elicitor of paranoia in humans. Paranoia is associated with a stronger prior on volatility, accompanied by elevated sensitivity to perceived changes in the task environment. Methamphetamine exposure in rats recapitulates this impaired uncertainty-driven belief updating and rigid anticipation of a volatile environment. Our work provides evidence of fundamental, domain-general learning differences in paranoid individuals. This paradigm enables further assessment of the interplay between uncertainty and belief-updating across individuals and species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7326495PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.56345DOI Listing

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