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Distortions of Mind Perception in Psychopathology

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2010

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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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Gray, Kurt, Adrianna C. Jenkins, Andrea S. Heberlein, and Daniel M. Wegner. 2010. Distortions of Mind Perception in Psychopathology. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108, no. 2: 477–479.

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Abstract

It has long been known that psychopathology can influence social perception, but a 2D framework of mind perception provides the opportunity for an integrative understanding of some disorders. We examined the covariation of mind perception with three subclinical syndromes—autism-spectrum disorder, schizotypy, and psychopathy—and found that each presents a unique mind-perception profile. Autism-spectrum disorder involves reduced perception of agency in adult humans. Schizotypy involves increased perception of both agency and experience in entities generally thought to lack minds. Psychopathy involves reduced perception of experience in adult humans, children, and animals. Disorders are differentially linked with the over- or underperception of agency and experience in a way that helps explain their real-world consequences.

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morality, empathy, theory of mind, transdiagnostic

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