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A Bayesian Account of Psychopathy: A Model of Lacks Remorse and Self-Aggrandizing Cover

A Bayesian Account of Psychopathy: A Model of Lacks Remorse and Self-Aggrandizing

Open Access
|Oct 2018

Abstract

This article proposes a formal model that integrates cognitive and psychodynamic psychotherapeutic models of psychopathy to show how two major psychopathic traits called lacks remorse and self-aggrandizing can be understood as a form of abnormal Bayesian inference about the self. This model draws on the predictive coding (i.e., active inference) framework, a neurobiologically plausible explanatory framework for message passing in the brain that is formalized in terms of hierarchical Bayesian inference. In summary, this model proposes that these two cardinal psychopathic traits reflect entrenched maladaptive Bayesian inferences about the self, which defend against the experience of deep-seated, self-related negative emotions, specifically shame and worthlessness. Support for the model in extant research on the neurobiology of psychopathy and quantitative simulations are provided. Finally, we offer a preliminary overview of a novel treatment for psychopathy that rests on our Bayesian formulation.

Language: English
Submitted on: Jul 2, 2017
Accepted on: Apr 27, 2018
Published on: Oct 1, 2018
Published by: MIT Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2018 Aaron Prosser, Karl J. Friston, Nathan Bakker, Thomas Parr, published by MIT Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.