Biased belief priors versus biased belief updating: Differential correlates of depression and anxiety.

Individuals prone to anxiety and depression often report beliefs and make judgements about themselves that are more negative than those reported by others. We use computational modeling of a richly naturalistic task to disentangle the role of negative priors versus negatively biased belief updating...

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Main Authors: Christopher Gagne, Sharon Agai, Christian Ramiro, Peter Dayan, Sonia Bishop
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2022-08-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010176
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author Christopher Gagne
Sharon Agai
Christian Ramiro
Peter Dayan
Sonia Bishop
author_facet Christopher Gagne
Sharon Agai
Christian Ramiro
Peter Dayan
Sonia Bishop
author_sort Christopher Gagne
collection DOAJ
description Individuals prone to anxiety and depression often report beliefs and make judgements about themselves that are more negative than those reported by others. We use computational modeling of a richly naturalistic task to disentangle the role of negative priors versus negatively biased belief updating and to investigate their association with different dimensions of Internalizing psychopathology. Undergraduate participants first provided profiles for a hypothetical tech internship. They then viewed pairs of other profiles and selected the individual they would prefer to work alongside out of each pair. In a subsequent phase of the experiment, participants made judgments about their relative popularity as hypothetical internship partners both before any feedback and after each of 20 items of feedback revealing whether or not they had been selected as the preferred teammate from a given pairing. Scores on latent factors of general negative affect, anxiety-specific affect and depression-specific affect were estimated using participants' self-report scores on standardized measures of anxiety and depression together with factor loadings from a bifactor analysis conducted previously. Higher scores on the depression-specific factor were linked to more negative prior beliefs but were not associated with differences in belief updating. In contrast, higher scores on the anxiety-specific factor were associated with a negative bias in belief updating but no difference in prior beliefs. These findings indicate that, to at least some extent, distinct processes may impact the formation of belief priors and in-the-moment belief updating and that these processes may be differentially disrupted in depression and anxiety. Future directions for enquiry include examination of the possibility that prior beliefs biases in depression might reflect generalization from prior experiences or global schema whereas belief updating biases in anxiety might be more situationally specific.
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spelling doaj.art-4b95312b235a4bac9818c799b520fe1f2023-01-30T05:30:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582022-08-01188e101017610.1371/journal.pcbi.1010176Biased belief priors versus biased belief updating: Differential correlates of depression and anxiety.Christopher GagneSharon AgaiChristian RamiroPeter DayanSonia BishopIndividuals prone to anxiety and depression often report beliefs and make judgements about themselves that are more negative than those reported by others. We use computational modeling of a richly naturalistic task to disentangle the role of negative priors versus negatively biased belief updating and to investigate their association with different dimensions of Internalizing psychopathology. Undergraduate participants first provided profiles for a hypothetical tech internship. They then viewed pairs of other profiles and selected the individual they would prefer to work alongside out of each pair. In a subsequent phase of the experiment, participants made judgments about their relative popularity as hypothetical internship partners both before any feedback and after each of 20 items of feedback revealing whether or not they had been selected as the preferred teammate from a given pairing. Scores on latent factors of general negative affect, anxiety-specific affect and depression-specific affect were estimated using participants' self-report scores on standardized measures of anxiety and depression together with factor loadings from a bifactor analysis conducted previously. Higher scores on the depression-specific factor were linked to more negative prior beliefs but were not associated with differences in belief updating. In contrast, higher scores on the anxiety-specific factor were associated with a negative bias in belief updating but no difference in prior beliefs. These findings indicate that, to at least some extent, distinct processes may impact the formation of belief priors and in-the-moment belief updating and that these processes may be differentially disrupted in depression and anxiety. Future directions for enquiry include examination of the possibility that prior beliefs biases in depression might reflect generalization from prior experiences or global schema whereas belief updating biases in anxiety might be more situationally specific.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010176
spellingShingle Christopher Gagne
Sharon Agai
Christian Ramiro
Peter Dayan
Sonia Bishop
Biased belief priors versus biased belief updating: Differential correlates of depression and anxiety.
PLoS Computational Biology
title Biased belief priors versus biased belief updating: Differential correlates of depression and anxiety.
title_full Biased belief priors versus biased belief updating: Differential correlates of depression and anxiety.
title_fullStr Biased belief priors versus biased belief updating: Differential correlates of depression and anxiety.
title_full_unstemmed Biased belief priors versus biased belief updating: Differential correlates of depression and anxiety.
title_short Biased belief priors versus biased belief updating: Differential correlates of depression and anxiety.
title_sort biased belief priors versus biased belief updating differential correlates of depression and anxiety
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010176
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