Dellinger-Ness Lorrie Ann, Handler Leonard
University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, USA.
Clin Psychol Rev. 2006 Sep;26(5):503-14. doi: 10.1016/j.cpr.2006.03.004. Epub 2006 May 19.
A review of the literature on human and non-human animal self-injury reveals that there has been little cross-fertilization of ideas between these two domains. Each body of research offers particular strengths, which, if combined, may more keenly inform clinicians and researchers alike about the nature of human self-injury. While research on self-injury among humans has necessarily relied upon correlational designs, researchers who study self-injury among non-human primates have more tightly controlled experimental methods at their disposal. Experimental research allows researchers and clinicians to address issues of causality in ways that are not possible with correlational designs. Despite the difficulties of drawing inferences from different species, a review of the experimental data on non-human primate self-injury may give researchers fresh insights into the elusive nature of human self-injury. This article highlights the research and theoretical material pertaining self-injury and identifies ways in which animal models of self-injury might inform research and clinical understanding of human self-injury.
一项关于人类和非人类动物自我伤害的文献综述表明,这两个领域之间几乎没有思想的交叉融合。每项研究都有其独特的优势,如果将这些优势结合起来,可能会更敏锐地让临床医生和研究人员了解人类自我伤害的本质。虽然关于人类自我伤害的研究必然依赖于相关设计,但研究非人类灵长类动物自我伤害的研究人员有更严格可控的实验方法可供使用。实验研究使研究人员和临床医生能够以相关设计无法做到的方式解决因果关系问题。尽管从不同物种进行推断存在困难,但对非人类灵长类动物自我伤害的实验数据进行综述可能会让研究人员对难以捉摸的人类自我伤害本质有新的见解。本文重点介绍了与自我伤害相关的研究和理论材料,并确定了自我伤害动物模型可能为人类自我伤害的研究和临床理解提供信息的方式。