van Schalkwyk Gerrit I, Volkmar Fred R, Corlett Philip R
Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Clinical Neuroscience Research Unit, Connecticut Mental Health Center, Yale University School of Medicine, 230 South Frontage Road, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA.
J Autism Dev Disord. 2017 May;47(5):1323-1340. doi: 10.1007/s10803-017-3065-9.
The co-occurrence of psychotic and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) symptoms represents an important clinical challenge. Here we consider this problem in the context of a computational psychiatry approach that has been applied to both conditions-predictive coding. Some symptoms of schizophrenia have been explained in terms of a failure of top-down predictions or an enhanced weighting of bottom-up prediction errors. Likewise, autism has been explained in terms of similar perturbations. We suggest that this theoretical overlap may explain overlapping symptomatology. Experimental evidence highlights meaningful distinctions and consistencies between these disorders. We hypothesize individuals with ASD may experience some degree of delusions without the presence of any additional impairment, but that hallucinations are likely indicative of a distinct process.
精神病性症状与自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)症状的共现是一项重大的临床挑战。在此,我们将在一种已应用于这两种病症的计算精神病学方法——预测编码的背景下探讨这个问题。精神分裂症的一些症状已根据自上而下预测的失败或自下而上预测误差的加权增强来解释。同样,自闭症也已根据类似的扰动来解释。我们认为这种理论上的重叠可能解释症状学上的重叠。实验证据突出了这些病症之间有意义的区别和一致性。我们假设患有ASD的个体可能在没有任何其他损害的情况下经历某种程度的妄想,但幻觉可能表明存在一个独特的过程。