Open Access
ARTICLE
Neural Decision-Making, Probability, and Psychiatric Vulnerability: Integrating Perceptual Choice, Temporal Evidence Accumulation, and Biological Complexity
Issue Vol. 2 No. 02 (2025): Volume 02 Issue 02 --- Section Articles
Abstract
Decision-making is one of the most fundamental operations of the human brain, linking sensory input, internal representations, motivational states, and overt action. Over the past several decades, neuroscience has moved from descriptive localization of function toward mechanistic accounts of how neural populations encode evidence, integrate information over time, and translate probabilistic representations into behavioral commitments. At the same time, parallel traditions in philosophy, probability theory, psychiatry, and systems biology have grappled with questions of determinism, uncertainty, agency, and pathological deviation. This article develops an integrative, theory-driven account of neural decision-making by synthesizing seminal work on perceptual choice, temporal integration, and reward-based inference with broader perspectives on probability, emergence, and psychiatric vulnerability. Drawing strictly on the provided references, the article situates the influential work of Gold and Shadlen on evidence accumulation within a historical lineage that includes Turing’s wartime statistical reasoning, Hume’s epistemology, and James’s reflections on determinism. It then extends this framework to contemporary findings on microstimulation of parietal cortex, speed–accuracy tradeoffs, and the dynamic weighting of prior probabilities over elapsed decision time. Beyond normative decision models, the article explores how genetic, neurochemical, and developmental factors associated with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder may distort neural decision processes, leading to altered inference, aberrant salience, and impaired agency. The discussion is grounded in multi-level explanations of biological systems, emphasizing emergence, multiple realization, and the limits of reductionism. By integrating cognitive neuroscience with psychiatry, philosophy, and systems theory, this work argues that decision-making is not merely a computational operation but a biologically embedded, temporally extended, and ethically significant process. The article concludes by outlining implications for legal responsibility, mental health research, and future interdisciplinary models of the deciding brain.
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