PROJECT 1 – Latent cause inference as a fundamental cognitive process
Latent cause inference is a fundamental cognitive process that allows us to group experiences together, so that
what happened in past events can easily influence what we do in new (similar) situations. Different
individuals might group events differently into latent causes, depending on the parameters of latent cause
inference in their brain: how readily they create new latent causes to explain novel experiences, how persistent
they believe latent causes are across time, and how similar they expect events to be that are ascribed to a
shared latent cause.
Because latent cause inference is at the heart of perception, learning, evaluation, and action selection,
alterations in the process due to extreme parameters may lead to psychopathology. For instance, over-splitting
of latent causes can prevent updating of previous knowledge with new contradicting information (see Project
4), possibly leading to a disorder of compulsion (Project 2) or anxiety (Project 3). Parameters of the latent
cause inference process may therefore provide useful biomarkers for vulnerability to psychopathology, and
this cognitive process may present an important transdiagnostic dimension that should be added to the NIMH
Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework.
In Project 1, our goal is to characterize fundamental individual differences in latent cause inference and relate
them to mental health symptom dimensions in a large general population sample (Aim 1.1), test their potential
relevance to several key mental health conditions (generalized anxiety, obsessive compulsive disorder, and
schizophrenia; Aim 1.2), and understand the circuitry that realizes latent cause inference in the brain, and its
alteration in psychiatric conditions (Aim 1.3). Towards these aims, we will use three behavioral tasks, one
laboratory task designed specifically to measure latent cause inference (the Microbes Task), and two
naturalistic event segmentation tasks that measure individual differences in perception of boundaries in
naturalistic streams of events (movies or stories).
By characterizing latent cause inference across mental health conditions and using multiple tasks, the results of
Project 1 will provide a comprehensive assessment of the potential use of latent cause inference as an RDoC
construct. Moreover, data from this project will provide strong constraints for the computational model of
latent cause inference developed by Core C, which will be used to analyze data from all projects in this Center.
In this way, association of latent cause inference parameters with a variety of symptom dimensions will help
constrain and interpret results in Projects 2 and 3, and the results of Aim 1.3 will potentially inform neural
recordings in Project 4.
No Sub Projects information available for 1P50MH136296-01 8439
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
No Publications available for 1P50MH136296-01 8439
Patents
No Patents information available for 1P50MH136296-01 8439
Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
No Outcomes available for 1P50MH136296-01 8439
Clinical Studies
No Clinical Studies information available for 1P50MH136296-01 8439
News and More
Related News Releases
No news release information available for 1P50MH136296-01 8439
History
No Historical information available for 1P50MH136296-01 8439
Similar Projects
No Similar Projects information available for 1P50MH136296-01 8439