Bipolar disorder dynamics: affective instabilities, relaxation oscillations and noise
Bipolar disorder dynamics: affective instabilities, relaxation oscillations and noise
Bipolar disorder is a chronic, recurrent mental illness characterized by extreme episodes of depressed and manic mood, interspersed with less severe but highly variable mood fluctuations. Here, we develop a novel mathematical approach for exploring the dynamics of bipolar disorder. We investigate how the dynamics of subjective experience of mood in bipolar disorder can be understood using a relaxation oscillator (RO) framework and test the model against mood time-series fluctuations from a set of individuals with bipolar disorder. We show that variable mood fluctuations in individuals diagnosed with bipolar disorder can be driven by the coupled effects of deterministic dynamics (captured by ROs) and noise. Using a statistical likelihood-based approach, we show that, in general, mood dynamics are described by two independent ROs with differing levels of endogenous variability among individuals. We suggest that this sort of nonlinear approach to bipolar disorder has neurobiological, cognitive and clinical implications for understanding this mental illness through a mechacognitive framework.
MB, Bonsall
8a91b4e5-b335-4fcf-b46c-111509b4bc2c
JR, Geddes
cc9d2e57-d494-4271-ba03-a6b315e40309
GM, Goodwin
59885ad4-876f-4ce6-a792-54771aa7f9fa
EA, Holmes
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
6 January 2015
MB, Bonsall
8a91b4e5-b335-4fcf-b46c-111509b4bc2c
JR, Geddes
cc9d2e57-d494-4271-ba03-a6b315e40309
GM, Goodwin
59885ad4-876f-4ce6-a792-54771aa7f9fa
EA, Holmes
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
MB, Bonsall, JR, Geddes, GM, Goodwin and EA, Holmes
(2015)
Bipolar disorder dynamics: affective instabilities, relaxation oscillations and noise.
Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 12 (112), [20150670].
(doi:10.1098/rsif.2015.0670).
Abstract
Bipolar disorder is a chronic, recurrent mental illness characterized by extreme episodes of depressed and manic mood, interspersed with less severe but highly variable mood fluctuations. Here, we develop a novel mathematical approach for exploring the dynamics of bipolar disorder. We investigate how the dynamics of subjective experience of mood in bipolar disorder can be understood using a relaxation oscillator (RO) framework and test the model against mood time-series fluctuations from a set of individuals with bipolar disorder. We show that variable mood fluctuations in individuals diagnosed with bipolar disorder can be driven by the coupled effects of deterministic dynamics (captured by ROs) and noise. Using a statistical likelihood-based approach, we show that, in general, mood dynamics are described by two independent ROs with differing levels of endogenous variability among individuals. We suggest that this sort of nonlinear approach to bipolar disorder has neurobiological, cognitive and clinical implications for understanding this mental illness through a mechacognitive framework.
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Published date: 6 January 2015
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Local EPrints ID: 508207
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508207
ISSN: 1742-5689
PURE UUID: 08438195-cc09-4527-aa65-f9c72fb89771
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Date deposited: 14 Jan 2026 17:53
Last modified: 17 Jan 2026 03:45
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Author:
Bonsall MB
Author:
Geddes JR
Author:
Goodwin GM
Author:
Holmes EA
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