Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5720678 | Biological Psychiatry | 2017 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
This article outlines how a core concept from theories of homeostasis and cybernetics, the inference-control loop, may be used to guide differential diagnosis in computational psychiatry and computational psychosomatics. In particular, we discuss 1) how conceptualizing perception and action as inference-control loops yields a joint computational perspective on brain-world and brain-body interactions and 2) how the concrete formulation of this loop as a hierarchical Bayesian model points to key computational quantities that inform a taxonomy of potential disease mechanisms. We consider the utility of this perspective for differential diagnosis in concrete clinical applications.
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Authors
Frederike H. Petzschner, Lilian A.E. Weber, Tim Gard, Klaas E. Stephan,