2022
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/djwuf
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Formalising social representation to explain psychiatric symptoms

Abstract: Recent work in social cognition has moved beyond a focus on how people process social reward to examine how healthy people represent other agents and how this is altered in psychiatric disorder. However, formal modelling of social representation has not kept pace with these changes, impeding our understanding of how core aspects of social cognition function, and fail, in psychopathology. We argue that belief-based computational models provide a basis for an integrated sociocognitive approach to psychiatry with… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…This is also predicted by the Social Deafferentation Hypothesis [99]; perceptions become imbued with social representations which provide familiar comfort and/or distress. Formal models may be used to assess alterations in the generation of and application of spontaneous social representations under conditions of ambiguity [100]. Probing the relationship between high-order beliefs about the self (schema, etc.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is also predicted by the Social Deafferentation Hypothesis [99]; perceptions become imbued with social representations which provide familiar comfort and/or distress. Formal models may be used to assess alterations in the generation of and application of spontaneous social representations under conditions of ambiguity [100]. Probing the relationship between high-order beliefs about the self (schema, etc.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%