Decision-making dysfunctions of counterfactuals in depression: who might I have been?

Cognitive neuroscience enables us now to decompose major depressive disorder into dysfunctional component processes and relate these processes to specific neural substrates. This approach can be used to illuminate the biological basis of altered psychological processes in depression, including abno...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jonathon Richard Howlett, Martin P Paulus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00143/full
id doaj-1b1f0ff1bae44059b00539e29002d251
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1b1f0ff1bae44059b00539e29002d2512020-11-25T00:12:20ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychiatry1664-06402013-11-01410.3389/fpsyt.2013.0014356393Decision-making dysfunctions of counterfactuals in depression: who might I have been?Jonathon Richard Howlett0Jonathon Richard Howlett1Jonathon Richard Howlett2Martin P Paulus3Martin P Paulus4Martin P Paulus5University of California, San DiegoUniversity of California, San DiegoVeterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare SystemUniversity of California, San DiegoVeterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare SystemUniversity of California, San DiegoCognitive neuroscience enables us now to decompose major depressive disorder into dysfunctional component processes and relate these processes to specific neural substrates. This approach can be used to illuminate the biological basis of altered psychological processes in depression, including abnormal decision-making. One important decision-related process is counterfactual thinking, or the comparison of reality to hypothetical alternatives. Evidence suggests that individuals with depression experience exaggerated emotional responses due to focusing on counterfactual decision outcomes in general and regret, i.e. the emotion associated with focus on an alternative superior outcome, in particular. Regret is linked to self-esteem in that it involves the evaluation of an individual’s own decisions. Alterations of self-esteem, in turn, are a hallmark of depression. The literature on the behavioral and neural processes underlying counterfactual thinking, self-esteem, and depression is selectively reviewed. A model is proposed in which unstable self-representation in depression is more strongly perturbed when a different choice would have produced a better outcome, leading to increased feelings of regret. This approach may help unify diverse aspects of depression, can generate testable predictions, and may suggest new treatment avenues targeting distorted counterfactual cognitions, attentional biases toward superior counterfactual outcomes, or increased affective response to regretted outcomes.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00143/fullAffectAmygdalaCognitionDecision MakingEmotionsNeostriatum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonathon Richard Howlett
Jonathon Richard Howlett
Jonathon Richard Howlett
Martin P Paulus
Martin P Paulus
Martin P Paulus
spellingShingle Jonathon Richard Howlett
Jonathon Richard Howlett
Jonathon Richard Howlett
Martin P Paulus
Martin P Paulus
Martin P Paulus
Decision-making dysfunctions of counterfactuals in depression: who might I have been?
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Affect
Amygdala
Cognition
Decision Making
Emotions
Neostriatum
author_facet Jonathon Richard Howlett
Jonathon Richard Howlett
Jonathon Richard Howlett
Martin P Paulus
Martin P Paulus
Martin P Paulus
author_sort Jonathon Richard Howlett
title Decision-making dysfunctions of counterfactuals in depression: who might I have been?
title_short Decision-making dysfunctions of counterfactuals in depression: who might I have been?
title_full Decision-making dysfunctions of counterfactuals in depression: who might I have been?
title_fullStr Decision-making dysfunctions of counterfactuals in depression: who might I have been?
title_full_unstemmed Decision-making dysfunctions of counterfactuals in depression: who might I have been?
title_sort decision-making dysfunctions of counterfactuals in depression: who might i have been?
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychiatry
issn 1664-0640
publishDate 2013-11-01
description Cognitive neuroscience enables us now to decompose major depressive disorder into dysfunctional component processes and relate these processes to specific neural substrates. This approach can be used to illuminate the biological basis of altered psychological processes in depression, including abnormal decision-making. One important decision-related process is counterfactual thinking, or the comparison of reality to hypothetical alternatives. Evidence suggests that individuals with depression experience exaggerated emotional responses due to focusing on counterfactual decision outcomes in general and regret, i.e. the emotion associated with focus on an alternative superior outcome, in particular. Regret is linked to self-esteem in that it involves the evaluation of an individual’s own decisions. Alterations of self-esteem, in turn, are a hallmark of depression. The literature on the behavioral and neural processes underlying counterfactual thinking, self-esteem, and depression is selectively reviewed. A model is proposed in which unstable self-representation in depression is more strongly perturbed when a different choice would have produced a better outcome, leading to increased feelings of regret. This approach may help unify diverse aspects of depression, can generate testable predictions, and may suggest new treatment avenues targeting distorted counterfactual cognitions, attentional biases toward superior counterfactual outcomes, or increased affective response to regretted outcomes.
topic Affect
Amygdala
Cognition
Decision Making
Emotions
Neostriatum
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00143/full
work_keys_str_mv AT jonathonrichardhowlett decisionmakingdysfunctionsofcounterfactualsindepressionwhomightihavebeen
AT jonathonrichardhowlett decisionmakingdysfunctionsofcounterfactualsindepressionwhomightihavebeen
AT jonathonrichardhowlett decisionmakingdysfunctionsofcounterfactualsindepressionwhomightihavebeen
AT martinppaulus decisionmakingdysfunctionsofcounterfactualsindepressionwhomightihavebeen
AT martinppaulus decisionmakingdysfunctionsofcounterfactualsindepressionwhomightihavebeen
AT martinppaulus decisionmakingdysfunctionsofcounterfactualsindepressionwhomightihavebeen
_version_ 1725399723082252288