Linking the past to the future by predictive processing: Implications for psychopathology.
Jingwen JinKatherine G JonasAprajita MohantyPublished in: Journal of psychopathology and clinical science (2023)
Most theories of psychopathology have focused on etiology at a specific level (e.g., genetic, neurobiological, psychological, or environmental) to explain specific symptoms or disorders. A few biopsychosocial theories have provided explanations that attempt to integrate different levels and disorders to some extent. However, these theories lack a framework in which different levels of analysis are integrated and thus do not explain the mechanism by which etiological factors interact and perturb neurobiology which in turn leads to psychopathology. We propose that predictive processing (PP), which originated in theoretical neurobiology literature, may provide a conceptually parsimonious and biologically plausible framework to achieve such integration. In PP, the human brain can be cast as implementing a generative model whose task is to minimize the surprise of sensory evidence by inferring its causes and actively controlling future sensory signals via action. This account offers a unifying model of perception, action, and emotion implicated in psychopathology. Furthermore, we show that PP can explain how different factors or levels result in psychopathology via updates of the generative model (the depth of the PP framework). Finally, we demonstrate the transdiagnostic appeal of PP by showing how perturbations within this framework can explain a broad range of psychopathology (the breadth of the PP framework), with a focus on bridging well-established psychosocial theories of psychopathology and PP. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).