Ontological Adaptation in Transition to Adulthood: A Theoretical Framework for Integrating Phenomenology and Neuroscience in Psychosis Research.
Joshua Chiappelli, Tiffany Beason
The Journal of nervous and mental disease February 1, 2023 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1097/nmd.0000000000001602 via PubMed
Summary
Psychotic disorders may arise from an abnormal deviation in the normal developmental process of forming a personal and social identity during late adolescence and early adulthood. This process typically includes increased exploratory and risk-taking behavior, sometimes challenging cultural norms. Aberrant salience can accelerate the drive to develop a meaningful identity, leading to delusion formation. Placing psychosis onset in the context of normal development offers a humanistic approach to understanding new-onset psychotic disorders.
Study at a glance
| Design | theoretical review |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Psychosis can be rooted in an abnormal deviation of the normal developmental process of identity formation, where aberrant salience accelerates the drive for a meaningful sense of identity, leading to delusion formation. |
Abstract
In this theoretical review, the neurodevelopmental model of psychotic disorders is considered within the framework of ontological development, referring to the individual-level construction of a sense of reality regarding identity and worldview. Following Erikson's theory of development, the challenge of forging a personal and social identity is a developmental process typical of late adolescence and early adulthood. Accompanying this process is a developmentally normal increase in exploratory and risk-taking behavior, which sometimes includes challenging and defying cultural norms. Although many aspects of ontological adaptation are developmentally appropriate, we argue that psychopathology such as psychosis can be rooted in an abnormal deviation of this process, in which aberrant salience accelerates the typical drive to develop a meaningful sense of identity, leading to delusion formation. By placing psychosis onset within a broader context of normal development, this model offers a humanistic approach for understanding experiences of new onset of psychotic disorders.