What is mood? A computational perspective

JE Clark, S Watson, KJ Friston - Psychological medicine, 2018 - cambridge.org
JE Clark, S Watson, KJ Friston
Psychological medicine, 2018cambridge.org
The neurobiological understanding of mood, and by extension mood disorders, remains
elusive despite decades of research implicating several neuromodulator systems. This
review considers a new approach based on existing theories of functional brain
organisation. The free energy principle (aka active inference), and its instantiation in the
Bayesian brain, offers a complete and simple formulation of mood. It has been proposed that
emotions reflect the precision of–or certainty about–the predicted sensorimotor/interoceptive …
The neurobiological understanding of mood, and by extension mood disorders, remains elusive despite decades of research implicating several neuromodulator systems. This review considers a new approach based on existing theories of functional brain organisation. The free energy principle (a.k.a. active inference), and its instantiation in the Bayesian brain, offers a complete and simple formulation of mood. It has been proposed that emotions reflect the precision of – or certainty about – the predicted sensorimotor/interoceptive consequences of action. By extending this reasoning, in a hierarchical setting, we suggest mood states act as (hyper) priors over uncertainty (i.e. emotions). Here, we consider the same computational pathology in the proprioceptive and interoceptive (behavioural and autonomic) domain in order to furnish an explanation for mood disorders. This formulation reconciles several strands of research at multiple levels of enquiry.
Cambridge University Press
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