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Complexity in psychological self-ratings: implications for research and practice.

Merlijn OlthofFred HasselmanAnna Lichtwarck-Aschoff
Published in: BMC medicine (2020)
Psychological self-ratings display complex dynamics. The presence of complexity in repeated self-ratings means that we have to acknowledge that (1) repeated self-ratings yield a complex pattern of data and not a set of (nearly) independent data points, (2) humans are "moving targets" whose self-ratings display non-stationary change processes including regime shifts, and (3) long-term prediction of individual trajectories may be fundamentally impossible. These findings point to a limitation of popular statistical time series models whose assumptions are violated by the presence of these complexity markers. We conclude that a complex systems approach to mental health should appreciate complexity as a fundamental aspect of psychopathology research by adopting the models and methods of complexity science. Promising first steps in this direction, such as research on real-time process monitoring, short-term prediction, and just-in-time interventions, are discussed.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • electronic health record
  • primary care
  • depressive symptoms
  • big data
  • machine learning
  • mental illness
  • artificial intelligence
  • anorexia nervosa