Atypical prediction error learning is associated with prodromal symptoms in individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis

Author:

Charlton Colleen E.ORCID,Lepock Jennifer R.,Hauke Daniel J.ORCID,Mizrahi RominaORCID,Kiang Michael,Diaconescu Andreea O.

Abstract

AbstractReductions in the auditory mismatch negativity (MMN) have been well-demonstrated in schizophrenia rendering it a promising biomarker for understanding the emergence of psychosis. According to the predictive coding theory of psychosis, MMN impairments may reflect disturbances in hierarchical information processing driven by maladaptive precision-weighted prediction errors (pwPEs) and enhanced belief updating. We applied a hierarchical Bayesian model of learning to single-trial EEG data from an auditory oddball paradigm in 31 help-seeking antipsychotic-naive high-risk individuals and 23 healthy controls to understand the computational mechanisms underlying the auditory MMN. We found that low-level sensory and high-level volatility pwPE expression correlated with EEG amplitudes, coinciding with the timing of the MMN. Furthermore, we found that prodromal positive symptom severity was associated with increased expression of sensory pwPEs and higher-level belief uncertainty. Our findings provide support for the role of pwPEs in auditory MMN generation, and suggest that increased sensory pwPEs driven by changes in belief uncertainty may render the environment seemingly unpredictable. This may predispose high-risk individuals to delusion-like ideation to explain this experience. These results highlight the value of computational models for understanding the pathophysiological mechanisms of psychosis.

Funder

Swiss National Science Foundation

Miner’s Lamp Innovation Fund in the Prevention and Early Detection of Severe Mental Illness Canadian Institute of Health Research

Krembil Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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