Cognitive Models - Brain's Belief Glitches

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Two-Factor Model: Dominant theory. Delusions arise from:
- Factor 1: An anomalous experience (e.g., strange sensory event, heightened perception).
- Factor 2: Impaired reasoning that fails to reject the resulting bizarre explanation.
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Key Cognitive Biases (📌 Mnemonic: J.A.T.):
- Jumping to Conclusions (JTC): Making firm judgments based on scant evidence.
- Attributional Style: Externalizing blame for negative outcomes (common in persecutory type).
- Theory of Mind (ToM) Deficit: Impaired ability to infer others' intentions.
⭐ The "Jumping to Conclusions" (JTC) bias is a classic finding; patients require significantly less data than controls to reach firm, often premature, conclusions.
Explanatory Models - One vs. Two-Factor Theories
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One-Factor (Bottom-Up) Theory:
- A single deficit, an anomalous experience (e.g., strange perception), is sufficient to generate a delusion.
- The delusion is a direct explanation for the experience.
- Example: Loss of affective response to a face → Capgras belief ("imposter").
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Two-Factor (Hybrid) Theory:
- Requires two cognitive deficits.
- Factor 1 (Bottom-Up): An anomalous experience creates a bizarre hypothesis.
- Factor 2 (Top-Down): Impaired belief evaluation prevents rejection of the irrational hypothesis.
⭐ High-Yield: Two-factor models explain why many with neurological abnormalities (Factor 1) don't develop delusions. Without a second deficit in reality-testing (Factor 2), they can dismiss strange experiences and do not form a fixed, false belief.
Cognitive Biases - The Mind's Usual Suspects
- Jumping to Conclusions (JTC): Most replicated finding. A tendency to form beliefs with minimal evidence.
- Assessed via the "beads task" (probabilistic reasoning); patients make a choice with fewer draws.
- Attributional Biases:
- Externalizing: Blaming external factors for negative outcomes.
- Personalizing: Viewing neutral events as self-referential (e.g., "they are laughing at me").
- Confirmation Bias: Seeking information that confirms one's delusions while ignoring contradictory evidence.
- Theory of Mind (ToM) Deficits: Impaired ability to infer the mental states of others, leading to misinterpretation of social cues.
⭐ The JTC bias is considered a stable vulnerability marker for psychosis, not just a symptom of active delusions.

Neurocognitive Links - Dopamine's Aberrant Salience

- Core Idea: Dysregulated mesolimbic dopamine (DA) causes the brain to assign inappropriate significance ("salience") to neutral thoughts and external stimuli.
- This is a "bottom-up" neurochemical error.
- The cortex then creates a "top-down" cognitive narrative (the delusion) to make sense of this aberrant salience.
⭐ Antipsychotics (D2 antagonists) are thought to work by dampening this salience. The delusion may persist, but it feels less important and distressing to the patient.
High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Jumping to conclusions (JTC) bias is a core cognitive error, leading to firm beliefs based on minimal evidence.
- Patients often show externalizing attributional biases, blaming outside forces for negative events.
- Deficits in Theory of Mind (ToM) impair understanding of others' intentions, fueling persecutory beliefs.
- Anomalous perceptual experiences can act as the initial seed for a delusional belief system.
- The two-factor theory requires both an unusual experience and a cognitive bias to explain it.
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