Hierarchical Bayesian models of social inference for probing persecutory delusional ideation.
Adult
Male
Paranoid Disorders
Hierarchical gaussian filter
Hierarchical bayesian inference
610 Medicine & health
Intention
Delusions
170 Ethics
2738 Psychiatry and Mental Health
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Humans
10237 Institute of Biomedical Engineering
Bayes Theorem
Models, Theoretical
Psychosis
16. Peace & justice
Clinical Psychology
Social Perception
Computational psychiatry
Female
Bayesian model selection
2803 Biological Psychiatry
DOI:
10.1037/abn0000500
Publication Date:
2020-08-06T16:31:30Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
While persecutory delusions (PDs) have been linked to fallacies of reasoning and social inference, computational characterizations of delusional tendencies are rare. Here, we examined 151 individuals from the general population on opposite ends of the PD spectrum (Paranoia Checklist [PCL]). Participants made trial-wise predictions in a probabilistic lottery, guided by advice from a more informed human and a nonsocial cue. Additionally, 2 frames differentially emphasized causes of invalid advice: (a) the adviser's possible intentions (dispositional frame) or (b) the rules of the game (situational frame). We applied computational modeling to examine possible reasons for group differences in behavior. Comparing different models, we found that a hierarchical Bayesian model (hierarchical Gaussian filter) explained participants' responses better than other learning models. Model parameters determining participants' belief updates about the adviser's fidelity and the contribution of prior beliefs about fidelity to trial-wise decisions, respectively, showed significant Group × Frame interactions: High PCL scorers held more rigid beliefs about the adviser's fidelity across both experimental frames and relied less on advice in situational frames than low scorers. These results suggest that PD tendencies are associated with rigid beliefs and prevent adaptive use of social information in "safe" contexts. This supports previous proposals of a link between PD and aberrant social inference. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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