Evidence for Reduced Sensory Precision and Increased Reliance on Priors in Hallucination-Prone Individuals in a General Population Sample

Author:

Benrimoh David1,Fisher Victoria L2,Seabury Rashina2,Sibarium Ely2,Mourgues Catalina2,Chen Doris2,Powers Albert2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, McGill University School of Medicine , Montreal , Canada

2. Yale University School of Medicine and the Connecticut Mental Health Center , New Haven, CT , USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThere is increasing evidence that people with hallucinations overweight perceptual beliefs relative to incoming sensory evidence. Past work demonstrating prior overweighting has used simple, nonlinguistic stimuli. However, auditory hallucinations in psychosis are often complex and linguistic. There may be an interaction between the type of auditory information being processed and its perceived quality in engendering hallucinations.Study DesignWe administered a linguistic version of the conditioned hallucinations (CH) task to an online sample of 88 general population participants. Metrics related to hallucination-proneness, hallucination severity, stimulus thresholds, and stimulus detection rates were collected. Data were used to fit parameters of a Hierarchical Gaussian Filter (HGF) model of perceptual inference to determine how latent perceptual states influenced task behavior.Study ResultsReplicating past results, higher CH rates were observed both in those with recent hallucinatory experiences as well as participants with high hallucination-proneness; CH rates were positively correlated with increased prior weighting; and increased prior weighting was related to hallucination severity. Unlike past results, participants with recent hallucinatory experiences as well as those with higher hallucination-proneness had higher stimulus thresholds, lower sensitivity to stimuli presented at the highest threshold, and had lower response confidence, consistent with lower precision of sensory evidence.ConclusionsWe replicate the finding that increased CH rates and recent hallucinations correlate with increased prior weighting using a linguistic version of the CH task. Results support a role for reduced sensory precision in the interplay between prior weighting and hallucination-proneness.

Funder

Connecticut Mental Health Center

State of Connecticut

Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services

K23 Career Development

National Institute of Mental Health

Career Award for Medical Scientists

Burroughs-Wellcome Fund

Carol and Eugene Ludwig Award for Early Career Research

Yale Department of Psychiatry

Yale School of Medicine

Yale Doctoral Fellowship in Clinical and Community Psychology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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