Literature DB >> 33006909

Better Safe Than Sorry: A Common Signature of General Vulnerability for Psychopathology.

Omer Van den Bergh1, Jos Brosschot2, Hugo Critchley3, Julian F Thayer4, Cristina Ottaviani5,6.   

Abstract

Several labels, such as neuroticism, negative emotionality, and dispositional negativity, indicate a broad dimension of psychopathology. However, largely separate, often disorder-specific research lines have developed that focus on different cognitive and affective characteristics that are associated with this dimension, such as perseverative cognition (worry, rumination), reduced autobiographical memory specificity, compromised fear learning, and enhanced somatic-symptom reporting. In this article, we present a theoretical perspective within a predictive-processing framework in which we trace these phenotypically different characteristics back to a common underlying "better-safe-than-sorry" processing strategy. This implies information processing that tends to be low in sensory-perceptual detail, which allows threat-related categorical priors to dominate conscious experience and for chronic uncertainty/surprise because of a stagnated error-reduction process. This common information-processing strategy has beneficial effects in the short term but important costs in the long term. From this perspective, we suggest that the phenomenally distinct cognitive and affective psychopathological characteristics mentioned above represent the same basic processing heuristic of the brain and are only different in relation to the particular type of information involved (e.g., in working memory, in autobiographical memory, in the external and internal world). Clinical implications of this view are discussed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  affectivity; autobiographical memory; dispositional negativity; fear learning; negative emotionality; neuroticism; perseverative cognition; somatization

Year:  2020        PMID: 33006909     DOI: 10.1177/1745691620950690

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Perspect Psychol Sci        ISSN: 1745-6916


  7 in total

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4.  High vagal tone and rapid extinction learning as potential transdiagnostic protective factors following childhood violence exposure.

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7.  In the Face of Potential Harm: The Predictive Validity of Neural Correlates of Performance Monitoring for Perceived Risk, Stress, and Internalizing Psychopathology During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

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  7 in total

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