Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4353551 Progress in Neurobiology 2010 25 Pages PDF
Abstract

Delusions are the false and often incorrigible beliefs that can cause severe suffering in mental illness. We cannot yet explain them in terms of underlying neurobiological abnormalities. However, by drawing on recent advances in the biological, computational and psychological processes of reinforcement learning, memory, and perception it may be feasible to account for delusions in terms of cognition and brain function. The account focuses on a particular parameter, prediction error – the mismatch between expectation and experience – that provides a computational mechanism common to cortical hierarchies, fronto-striatal circuits and the amygdala as well as parietal cortices. We suggest that delusions result from aberrations in how brain circuits specify hierarchical predictions, and how they compute and respond to prediction errors. Defects in these fundamental brain mechanisms can vitiate perception, memory, bodily agency and social learning such that individuals with delusions experience an internal and external world that healthy individuals would find difficult to comprehend. The present model attempts to provide a framework through which we can build a mechanistic and translational understanding of these puzzling symptoms.

Research highlights▶ Delusions have been considered ‘ununderstandable’ in terms of cognitive and neural mechanisms. ▶ A parameter from formal learning models, prediction error, may provide some traction; we learn most in situations that violate our expectations and engender prediction errors. ▶ We have localized the neural circuitry of prediction error processing and related its function to the formation of beliefs. ▶ The same circuitry has been used to implicate excessive and inappropriate prediction error in delusion formation. ▶ The same neural and cognitive processes may explain the tenacity of delusions as well as their disparate and bizarre contents.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Neuroscience (General)
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