Neurocognitive Model of Schema-Congruent and -Incongruent Learning in Clinical Disorders: Application to Social Anxiety and Beyond

Author:

Moscovitch David A.1ORCID,Moscovitch Morris23,Sheldon Signy4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology and Centre for Mental Health Research & Treatment, University of Waterloo

2. Rotman Research Institute and Department of Psychology, Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care

3. Department of Psychology, University of Toronto

4. Department of Psychology, McGill University

Abstract

Negative schemas lie at the core of many common and debilitating mental disorders. Thus, intervention scientists and clinicians have long recognized the importance of designing effective interventions that target schema change. Here, we suggest that the optimal development and administration of such interventions can benefit from a framework outlining how schema change occurs in the brain. Guided by basic neuroscientific findings, we provide a memory-based neurocognitive framework for conceptualizing how schemas emerge and change over time and how they can be modified during psychological treatment of clinical disorders. We highlight the critical roles of the hippocampus, ventromedial prefrontal cortex, amygdala, and posterior neocortex in directing schema-congruent and -incongruent learning (SCIL) in the interactive neural network that comprises the autobiographical memory system. We then use this framework, which we call the SCIL model, to derive new insights about the optimal design features of clinical interventions that aim to strengthen or weaken schema-based knowledge through the core processes of episodic mental simulation and prediction error. Finally, we examine clinical applications of the SCIL model to schema-change interventions in psychotherapy and provide cognitive-behavior therapy for social anxiety disorder as an illustrative example.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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