AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how heightened uncertainty about the environment contributes to the formation of persecutory delusions, with a focus on how paranoia uniquely interacts with social and non-social scenarios.
  • Researchers conducted experiments with 693 participants to compare their responses to changes in social and non-social situations, revealing that paranoia leads to increased uncertainty regarding other people's intentions and a rigidity in harmful attributions during social tasks.
  • Findings suggest that paranoia is linked to a general uncertainty about the world, but this uncertainty is expressed differently in social interactions compared to non-social tasks, providing insights into potential mechanisms behind persecutory delusions.

Article Abstract

Theoretical accounts suggest heightened uncertainty about the state of the world underpin aberrant belief updates, which in turn increase the risk of developing a persecutory delusion. However, this raises the question as to how an agent's uncertainty may relate to the precise phenomenology of paranoia, as opposed to other qualitatively different forms of belief. We tested whether the same population (n = 693) responded similarly to non-social and social contingency changes in a probabilistic reversal learning task and a modified repeated reversal Dictator game, and the impact of paranoia on both. We fitted computational models that included closely related parameters that quantified the rigidity across contingency reversals and the uncertainty about the environment/partner. Consistent with prior work we show that paranoia was associated with uncertainty around a partner's behavioural policy and rigidity in harmful intent attributions in the social task. In the non-social task we found that pre-existing paranoia was associated with larger decision temperatures and commitment to suboptimal cards. We show relationships between decision temperature in the non-social task and priors over harmful intent attributions and uncertainty over beliefs about partners in the social task. Our results converge across both classes of model, suggesting paranoia is associated with a general uncertainty over the state of the world (and agents within it) that takes longer to resolve, although we demonstrate that this uncertainty is expressed asymmetrically in social contexts. Our model and data allow the representation of sociocognitive mechanisms that explain persecutory delusions and provide testable, phenomenologically relevant predictions for causal experiments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9352206PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010326DOI Listing

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