13:30 - 15:00
Talk Session II
13:30 - 15:00
Mon-A7-Talk II-
Computational psychiatry: Identifying the fine- grained behavioural mechanisms underlying symptoms in psychosis and internalising disorders
{day_3l_code}-Talk II-
Room: A7
Chair/s:
Franziska Knolle
Computational psychiatry provides a direct approach for the investigation and development of mechanistic explanations for psychiatric illnesses, through the mathematical description of processes underlying behaviour. Alterations in decision-making, a cognitive process relevant for the successful interaction with the environment, have been reported in disorders including psychosis, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and eating disorders, and have been linked to the development of symptoms. Importantly, we describe a transdiagnostic approach using similar tasks and models to show that specific alterations in mathematical parameters express disease-specific dysfunction and symptom associations. Kelly Diederen (King’s College London) used a novel gamified task in conjunction with computational modelling to demonstrate that decision-confidence and belief-updating can be measured at scale using online assessment, and that these processes are altered in people at increased risk of psychosis. Elisabeth Sterner (LMU/TUM) will show that deficits in punishment learning in early psychosis are linked to increased forgetting and reduced confidence in policy selection using an Active Inference model of the Go/NoGo-Task. Pritha Sen (LMU/TUM) will present first-time imaging data investigating model-based (MB) and model-free (MF) decision making in OCD using hierarchical Bayesian modelling of the Two-Step task. Computational result show differences between patients and controls with links to symptom strength. Margaret Westwater (Oxford/Yale) will report data from both laboratory-based and online assessments of learning under uncertainty, which used computational modelling to
demonstrate that impaired learning in individuals with eating disorders is linked to altered reward sensitivity. Franziska Knolle (TUM/Cambridge) will discuss the effect of dopaminergic treatment on probabilistic reward learning in OCD using Rescorla-Wagner-modelling, showing that exaggerated cingulate reward prediction errors in patients are remediated by dopaminergic modulation. This state-of-the-art symposium demonstrates that computational models of decision making provide mechanistic explanations for dysfunctions underlying three common psychiatric conditions: psychosis, OCD, and eating disorders, and may provide starting points for treatment development.
13:30 - 13:45
13:45 - 14:00
Mon-A7-Talk II-02
Elisabeth Friederike Sterner (Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroradiology, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany)
14:00 - 14:15
Mon-A7-Talk II-03
Pritha Sen (Technische Universität München)
14:15 - 14:30
Mon-A7-Talk II-04
Margaret Westwater (Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK | Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK)
14:30 - 14:45
Mon-A7-Talk II-05
Franziska Knolle (Diagnostische und Interventionelle Neuroradiologie, Technische Universität München)