Metacognition as a window into subjective affective experience

Author:

Cushing Cody A.1ORCID,Lau Hakwan2,Hofmann Stefan G.3,LeDoux Joseph E.4567,Taschereau‐Dumouchel Vincent89

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology UCLA Los Angeles California USA

2. RIKEN Center for Brain Science Wako Japan

3. Department of Psychology Philipps‐University Marburg Marburg Germany

4. Center for Neural Science and Department of Psychology New York University New York New York USA

5. Emotional Brain Institute Nathan Kline Institute Orangeburg New York USA

6. Department of Psychiatry, and Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry New York University Langone Medical School New York New York USA

7. Max‐Planck‐NYU Center for Language, Music, and Emotion (CLaME) New York University New York New York USA

8. Department of Psychiatry and Addictology Université de Montréal Montreal Quebec Canada

9. Centre de Recherche de l'Institut Universitaire en Santé Mentale de Montréal Montreal Quebec Canada

Abstract

When patients seek professional help for mental disorders, they often do so because of troubling subjective affective experiences. While these subjective states are at the center of the patient's symptomatology, scientific tools for studying them and their cognitive antecedents are limited. Here, we explore the use of concepts and analytic tools from the science of consciousness, a field of research that has faced similar challenges in having to develop robust empirical methods for addressing a phenomenon that has been considered difficult to pin down experimentally. One important strand is the operationalization of some relevant processes in terms of metacognition and confidence ratings, which can be rigorously studied in both humans and animals. By assessing subjective experience with similar approaches, we hope to develop new scientific approaches for studying affective processes and promoting psychological resilience in the face of debilitating emotional experiences.

Publisher

Wiley

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