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Phenomenological and neurocognitive perspectives on delusions: A critical overview.

Louis Sass, Greg Byrom

World psychiatry : official journal of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) June 1, 2015 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1002/wps.20205 via PubMed

Summary

Phenomenological and neurocognitive perspectives on delusions overlap considerably. This paper reviews major phenomenological accounts, including Jaspers' ideas on incomprehensibility, delusional mood, and disturbed core self-experience in schizophrenia, as well as Conrad's notions of apophany and anastrophe. It highlights consistencies between phenomenological models stressing minimal-self disturbance and neurocognitive models emphasizing salience dysregulation and prediction error.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Current neurocognitive models of delusions emphasizing hypersalience could be complemented by considering hyposalience, which may underlie a delusional derealization and an 'anything goes' attitude conducive to delusion formation.

Abstract

There is considerable overlap between phenomenological and neurocognitive perspectives on delusions. In this paper, we first review major phenomenological accounts of delusions, beginning with Jaspers' ideas regarding incomprehensibility, delusional mood, and disturbed "cogito" (basic, minimal, or core self-experience) in what he termed "delusion proper" in schizophrenia. Then we discuss later studies of decontextualization and delusional mood by Matussek, changes in self and world in delusion formation according to Conrad's notions of "apophany" and "anastrophe", and the implications of ontological transformations in the felt sense of reality in some delusions. Next we consider consistencies between: a) phenomenological models stressing minimal-self (ipseity) disturbance and hyperreflexivity in schizophrenia, and b) recent neurocognitive models of delusions emphasizing salience dysregulation and prediction error. We voice reservations about homogenizing tendencies in neurocognitive explanations of delusions (the "paranoia paradigm"), given experiential variations in states of delusion. In particular we consider shortcomings of assuming that delusions necessarily or always involve "mistaken beliefs" concerning objective facts about the world. Finally, we offer some suggestions regarding possible neurocognitive factors. Current models that stress hypersalience (banal stimuli experienced as strange) might benefit from considering the potential role of hyposalience in delusion formation. Hyposalience - associated with experiencing the strange as if it were banal, and perhaps with activation of the default mode network - may underlie a kind of delusional derealization and an "anything goes" attitude. Such an attitude would be conducive to delusion formation, yet differs significantly from the hypersalience emphasized in current neurocognitive theories.

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