Beyond Nature Versus Nurture: the Emergence of Emotion

被引:5
|
作者
Wood, Adrienne [1 ]
Coan, James A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Virginia, Dept Psychol, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Theory of emotion; Dynamical systems; Complex systems; Evolution; Emergence; Fear; PSYCHOLOGICAL CONSTRUCTION; NEUROBIOLOGICAL DEGENERACY; PERCEPTION; WALKING; ADAPTATIONS; COMPLEXITY; EVOLUTION; DYNAMICS; DISTINCT; ACCOUNT;
D O I
10.1007/s42761-023-00212-2
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Affective science is stuck in a version of the nature-versus-nurture debate, with theorists arguing whether emotions are evolved adaptations or psychological constructions. We do not see these as mutually exclusive options. Many adaptive behaviors that humans have evolved to be good at, such as walking, emerge during development - not according to a genetically dictated program, but through interactions between the affordances of the body, brain, and environment. We suggest emotions are the same. As developing humans acquire increasingly complex goals and learn optimal strategies for pursuing those goals, they are inevitably pulled to particular brain-body-behavior states that maximize outcomes and self-reinforce via positive feedback loops. We call these recurring, self-organized states emotions. Emotions display many of the hallmark features of self-organized attractor states, such as hysteresis (prior events influence the current state), degeneracy (many configurations of the underlying variables can produce the same global state), and stability. Because most bodily, neural, and environmental affordances are shared by all humans - we all have cardiovascular systems, cerebral cortices, and caregivers who raised us - similar emotion states emerge in all of us. This perspective helps reconcile ideas that, at first glance, seem contradictory, such as emotion universality and neural degeneracy.
引用
收藏
页码:443 / 452
页数:10
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