- Monday, February 26th 2018 at 16:00 - 17:00 UK (Other timezones)
- General participation info | Participate online | + Phone in United States (Toll Free): 1 877 309 2073 United States: +1 (571) 317-3129 Australia (Toll Free): 1 800 193 385 Australia: +61 2 8355 1020 Austria (Toll Free): 0 800 202148 Belgium (Toll Free): 0 800 78884 Canada (Toll Free): 1 888 455 1389 Denmark (Toll Free): 8090 1924 France (Toll Free): 0 805 541 047 Germany (Toll Free): 0 800 184 4222 Greece (Toll Free): 00 800 4414 3838 Hungary (Toll Free): (06) 80 986 255 Iceland (Toll Free): 800 9869 Ireland (Toll Free): 1 800 946 538 Israel (Toll Free): 1 809 454 830 Italy (Toll Free): 800 793887 Japan (Toll Free): 0 120 663 800 Luxembourg (Toll Free): 800 22104 Netherlands (Toll Free): 0 800 020 0182 New Zealand (Toll Free): 0 800 47 0011 Norway (Toll Free): 800 69 046 Poland (Toll Free): 00 800 1213979 Portugal (Toll Free): 800 819 575 Spain (Toll Free): 800 900 582 Sweden (Toll Free): 0 200 330 905 Switzerland (Toll Free): 0 800 740 393 United Kingdom (Toll Free): 0 800 169 0432 Access Code: 731-636-357
Overwhelming evidence suggests that our mental wellbeing strongly depends on how we evaluate ourselves and other people. I will present some conventional, but still somewhat surprising, evidence about this from a large collaborative, longitudinal study. I will then discuss some theoretical and experimental work that attempts to clarify how people infer about others and how they use their observations of other’s behaviour to make inferences about their own selves, including how to evaluate themselves. A computational psychiatry of relationships needs formulations of goals, tastes, inference and resulting preferences that put the joint probability of self- and others- states at the centre. Finally, I will relate these concepts to the learning-based therapies that explicitly deal with self- and other- evaluation and what the optimal, realistic goals might be for a computational psychiatry of relationships.
Michael Moutoussis, MBBS PhD
Honorary Fellow
Max Planck UCL Centre for Computational Psychiatry and Ageing Research
University College London