Sunday, May 15, 2016

Bayesian inference in the (abnormal) mind

The (abnormal) mind can be modeled as a Bayesian inference engine, as summarized in the post, Bayesian reasoning implicated in some mental disorders. Excerpt:
“The brain is a guessing machine [i.e., Bayesian inference engine - JKK], trying at each moment of time to guess what is out there,” says computational neuroscientist Peggy Seriès. Guesses just slightly off — like mistaking a smile for a smirk — rarely cause harm. But guessing gone seriously awry may play a part in mental illnesses such as schizophrenia, autism and even anxiety disorders, Seriès and other neuroscientists suspect. They say that a mathematical expression known as Bayes’ theorem — which quantifies how prior expectations can be combined with current evidence — may provide novel insights into pernicious mental problems that have so far defied explanation.
For a tutorial about Bayesian models of perception and cognition, see Bayesian learning theory applied to human cognition.
http://www.bcs.rochester.edu/people/robbie/jacobskruschke_cogsci.pdf


Note that Bayesian modeling of data is a richly valuable approach regardless of whether any particular Bayesian model of mind is accurate. See this brief blog post for the distinction between (Bayesian) descriptive models of data, psychometric models, and models of mind. 
http://doingbayesiandataanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/10/bayesian-models-of-mind-psychometric.html

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