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The Nested States Model: A Phenomenologically-Grounded Model of the Mind.

George H Denfield, Evan J Kyzar

Psychopathology January 1, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1159/000540319 via PubMed

Summary

Subjective experience is central to mental illness but often overlooked in empirical research. The Nested States Model (NSM) offers a framework for understanding psychopathological processes by describing subjective experience as a system of nested states that influence each other across hierarchical layers. The NSM helps construct clinical formulations centered on individual experiences, organize findings from clinical-phenomenological research, and bridge phenomenological work with neurophysiological research on brain dynamics.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding The Nested States Model provides a scheme for characterizing patterns of experience that comprise various psychopathological processes, enabling phenomenologically-grounded clinical formulations, research organization, and integration with brain dynamics.

Abstract

Subjective experience is central to the nature of mental illness, yet it has not played a central role in most empirical approaches to psychopathology. While phenomenological perspectives in psychiatry have seen a recent resurgence, there remains a need for more detailed models of psychopathological processes based on explicit phenomenological and enactive foundations. We present a framework derived from the Nested States Model (NSM) through which such phenomenologically-grounded models might be constructed. The NSM describes the dynamic structure of subjective experience as a system of nested states that reciprocally influence one another across hierarchical layers. Here, we show how the NSM provides a scheme for characterizing patterns of experience that comprise various psychopathological processes. We demonstrate the utility of this scheme both for clinical practice and for building our knowledge of psychopathological processes more broadly. The NSM can advance three aims that we see as critical for the lasting integration of phenomenological approaches to psychopathology within psychiatry. First, we show that the NSM provides a means for constructing clinical formulations and treatment considerations that center squarely on an individual's subjective experiences. Second, the NSM supplies a framework for organizing findings from clinical-phenomenological research that can guide the construction of broader phenomenologically-grounded models of psychopathological processes. Lastly, the NSM aligns our perspective on subjective experience with emerging perspectives on brain dynamics, helping to bridge phenomenological work with ongoing neurophysiological research.

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