Moving From Static to Dynamic Models of the Onset of Mental Disorder A Review

被引:226
作者
Nelson, Barnaby [1 ,2 ]
McGorry, Patrick D. [1 ,2 ]
Wichers, Marieke [3 ]
Wigman, Johanna T. W. [3 ]
Hartmann, Jessica A. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Melbourne, Natl Ctr Excellence Youth Mental Hlth, Orygen, 35 Poplar Rd Locked Bag 10, Melbourne, Vic 3052, Australia
[2] Univ Melbourne, Ctr Youth Mental Hlth, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
[3] Univ Groningen, Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Dept Psychiat, Interdisciplinary Ctr Psychopathol & Emot Regulat, Groningen, Netherlands
基金
欧洲研究理事会; 英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
CRITICAL SLOWING-DOWN; NETWORK APPROACH; TIPPING POINTS; DSM-V; PSYCHOSIS; RISK; PSYCHIATRY; PSYCHOPATHOLOGY; DEPRESSION; DIAGNOSIS;
D O I
10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2017.0001
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
IMPORTANCE In recent years, there has been increased focus on subthreshold stages of mental disorders, with attempts to model and predict which individuals will progress to full-threshold disorder. Given this research attention and the clinical significance of the issue, this article analyzes the assumptions of the theoretical models in the field. OBSERVATIONS Psychiatric research into predicting the onset of mental disorder has shown an overreliance on one-off sampling of cross-sectional data (ie, a snapshot of clinical state and other risk markers) and may benefit from taking dynamic changes into account in predictive modeling. Cross-disciplinary approaches to complex system structures and changes, such as dynamical systems theory, network theory, instability mechanisms, chaos theory, and catastrophe theory, offer potent models that can be applied to the emergence (or decline) of psychopathology, including psychosis prediction, as well as to transdiagnostic emergence of symptoms. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Psychiatric research may benefit from approaching psychopathology as a system rather than as a category, identifying dynamics of system change (eg, abrupt vs gradual psychosis onset), and determining the factors to which these systems are most sensitive (eg, interpersonal dynamics and neurochemical change) and the individual variability in system architecture and change. These goals can be advanced by testing hypotheses that emerge from cross-disciplinary models of complex systems. Future studies require repeated longitudinal assessment of relevant variables through either (or a combination of) micro-level (momentary and day-to-day) and macro-level (month and year) assessments. Ecological momentary assessment is a data collection technique appropriate for micro-level assessment. Relevant statistical approaches are joint modeling and time series analysis, includingmetric-based and model-based methods that draw on the mathematical principles of dynamical systems. This next generation of prediction studies may more accurately model the dynamic nature of psychopathology and system change as well as have treatment implications, such as introducing a means of identifying critical periods of risk for mental state deterioration.
引用
收藏
页码:528 / 534
页数:7
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