concept
active
concept:dissociative-identity-disorderDissociative Identity Disorder
Clinical condition demonstrating multiple selves (alters) within one body.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Hypotheses (1)
hypothesis
- Speculative hypothesis that memories themselves are agents.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- Extended identity and sense of self; in Mahāyāna Buddhism, perceived as permeable and co-constituted with others.
- Berridge and Robinson's finding that dopamine mediates wanting but not liking; accommodated as two evaluation types
- Provocative reinterpretation of cancer as a failure mode of collective decision-making.
- The philosophical question of what constitutes identity over time, applied to the problem of what a dialogue agent would seek to preserve
- Symptom in schizophrenia; likened to LLM incoherence over long ranges
- Scale with two attribute values that are negations of each other (e.g., pass/fail).
- High entropy state, the natural tendency described by the second law.
- Concept of self as extended and co-constituted by interactions, per Mahāyāna.