Prediction Error
Unexpected outcomes drive learning.
Shrink Definition
Prediction error is the difference between what the brain expected to happen and what actually occurred. Prediction errors provide one of the primary mechanisms through which learning occurs, prompting the brain to strengthen, weaken, or revise its internal models of the world.
Plain language
Your brain learns most when reality surprises it.
Shrink Insight
Surprise is often the beginning of wisdom.
Why it matters
Prediction error contributes to: • learning • habit formation • skill acquisition • emotional adaptation • decision making • resilience Without prediction errors, mental models would rarely improve.
Common misunderstanding
Being wrong isn't always failure. Being wrong often provides the information needed to become more accurate.
Shrink Perspective
Reality teaches most effectively when it disagrees with us.
Shrink Reflection
When was the last time reality pleasantly surprised you?
Shrink Journal
Describe a prediction that turned out to be wrong. What did reality teach you?
Shrink Step
Notice one expectation that didn't unfold as predicted today. Treat it as data rather than disappointment.
Shrink Minute
Learning begins where certainty ends.
Shrink Takeaway
Every surprise contains information.
Medical boundary
This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.
Evidence summary
Prediction error is a foundational concept in computational neuroscience, reinforcement learning, cognitive psychology, and behavioral neuroscience, describing how discrepancies between expectation and outcome drive learning.
Sources
Schultz (reward prediction error); Friston (predictive coding); American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature
Reference status: landmark attributed