The Nested States Model: An empirical approach to subjective experience
George H. Denfield, Evan J. Kyzar
October 16, 2023 preprint DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/zqa95 via OpenAlex
Summary
Subjective experience is central to mental illness but has been neglected in empirical psychopathology. The Nested States Model (NSM) offers a framework for constructing detailed phenomenological models by describing subjective experience as a system of nested states. This provides a structured scheme for operationalizing subjectivity, enabling empirical study. The NSM grounds thinking about psychopathological processes around states and their transitions, promising an approach that is close to individual experience, empirically tractable, and aligned with neuroscience research.
Study at a glance
| Characteristics | Theoretical or philosophical paper |
|---|---|
| Keywords | Nested set model Econometrics Psychology Computer science Mathematics |
| Key finding | The Nested States Model provides a framework for constructing phenomenological models of psychopathological processes by characterizing subjective experience as a system of nested states. |
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. Despite some recent progress, we lack detailed phenomenological models for psychopathological processes and mental disorders. Here, we present a framework through which such models could be constructed. This framework is derived from the Nested States Model (NSM), which describes the dynamic structure of subjective experience as a system of nested states. Through this characterization, it provides a flexible and structured scheme for operationalizing subjective experience, which facilitates the empirical study of subjectivity. More broadly, we argue that the NSM forms a basis for thinking about psychopathological processes centered around the notion of states and their transitions. From this perspective, an approach could be developed that is near to individual experience, empirically tractable, and aligned with on-going research in neuroscience.