Is psychosis caused by defective dissociation? An Artificial Life model for schizophrenia
Alessandro Fontana

TL;DR
This paper proposes a comprehensive model of schizophrenia that integrates neurobiological, environmental, and psychodynamic factors, emphasizing the role of defective dissociation in symptom development.
Contribution
It introduces a novel artificial life model combining trauma theory and dissociation mechanisms to explain schizophrenia's complex origins.
Findings
Dissociation acts as a protective mental tool against emotional pain.
Defective dissociation can lead to positive or negative schizophrenia symptoms.
The model links trauma, dissociation, and symptom manifestation in schizophrenia.
Abstract
Both neurobiological and environmental factors are known to play a role in the origin of schizophrenia, but no model has been proposed that accounts for both. This work presents a functional model of schizophrenia that merges psychodynamic elements with ingredients borrowed from the theory of psychological traumas, and evidences the interplay of traumatic experiences and defective mental functions in the pathogenesis of the disorder. Our model foresees that dissociation is a standard tool used by the mind to protect itself from emotional pain. In case of repeated traumas, the mind learns to adopt selective forms of dissociation to avoid pain without losing touch with external reality. We conjecture that this process is defective in schizophrenia, where dissociation is either too weak, giving rise to positive symptoms, or too strong, causing negative symptoms.
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health and Psychiatry · Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments · Body Image and Dysmorphia Studies
