A hierarchical narrative framework for OCD
P.J. Moore

TL;DR
This paper proposes a hierarchical narrative framework based on a generative model of cognition to explain OCD symptoms as dysfunctions in sub-surface inference levels, while the overall perspective remains intact.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of formal narratives and a hierarchical model of cognition to explain OCD as a dysfunction in inference processes.
Findings
OCD arises from dysfunction in sub-surface inference levels.
Symptoms like compulsions and obsessions are explained by inference failures.
The framework unifies various OCD symptoms under a single cognitive dysfunction.
Abstract
This paper gives an explanatory framework for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) based on a generative model of cognition. The framework is constructed using the new concept of a 'formal narrative' which is a sequence of cognitive states inferred from sense data. First we propose that human cognition uses a hierarchy of narratives to predict changes in the natural and social environment. Each layer in the hierarchy represents a distinct 'view of the world', but it also contributes to a global unitary perspective. Second, the generative models used for cognitive inference can create new narratives from those states already experienced by an individual. We hypothesise that when a threat is recognised, narratives are generated as a cognitive model of possible threat scenarios. Using this framework, we suggest that OCD arises from a dysfunction in sub-surface levels of inference while the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders · Autism Spectrum Disorder Research · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment
