Journal article

Statistical Learning and Inference Is Impaired in the Nonclinical Continuum of Psychosis

I Dzafic, R Randeniya, CD Harris, M Bammel, MI Garrido

Journal of Neuroscience | SOC NEUROSCIENCE | Published : 2020

Abstract

Our perceptions result from the brain’s ability to make inferences, or predictive models, of sensory information. Recently, it has been proposed that psychotic traits may be linked to impaired predictive processes. Here, we examine the brain dynamics underlying statistical learning and inference in stable and volatile environments, in a population of healthy human individuals (N = 75; 36 males, 39 females) with a range of psychotic-like experiences. We measured prediction error responses to sound sequences with electroencephalography, gauged sensory inference explicitly by behaviorally recording sensory statistical learning errors, and used dynamic causal modeling to tap into the underlying ..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers