Shades of Gray: Towards a New Way of Categorizing Psychiatric Illness

A new crop of researchers hope that computational psychiatry will shift how we understand the mind, which could lead to novel ways to diagnose and treat psychiatric disorders

Amitha Kalaichandran
20 min readAug 2, 2022

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“To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.” — Buckminster Fuller.

One rainy Wednesday evening in November, I had dinner in Mayfair, central London, with a successful filmmaker, whom I’ll call Arthur. I thought I had him pinned after the first course of a rather extensive vegetarian tasting menu: a mushroom tea served in a tiny ceramic mug.

Arthur likely grew up in a small village somewhere in the northeast of England. Perhaps his father was a fisherman or worked another blue-collar job? Recognizing his creativity and intelligence early, Arthur likely excelled in his small ‘state’ (public) school and eventually made it to London to study film.

Having lived the better part of the first decade of my life in London, I was aware of the specific peculiarities of English speech. Compared with North America, where an accent usually conveys region, English accents can also signify socioeconomic class. If Arthur had attended Eton, Harrow…

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Amitha Kalaichandran

A physician, epidemiologist, medical journalist, and health tech consultant with an interest in the intersection of integrative medicine and innovation.