Löw Andreas, Lang Peter J, Smith J Carson, Bradley Margaret M
Center for the Study of Emotion and Attention, P.O. Box 112766, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA.
Psychol Sci. 2008 Sep;19(9):865-73. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02170.x.
This research examined the psychophysiology of emotional arousal anticipatory to potentially aversive and highly pleasant outcomes. Human brain reactions (event-related potentials) and body reactions (heart rate, skin conductance, the probe startle reflex) were assessed along motivational gradients determined by apparent distance from sites of potential punishment or reward. A predator-prey survival context was simulated using cues that signaled possible money rewards or possible losses; the cues appeared to loom progressively closer to the viewer, until a final step when a rapid key response could ensure reward or avoid a punishing loss. The observed anticipatory response patterns of heightened vigilance and physiological mobilization are consistent with the view that the physiology of emotion is founded on action dispositions that evolved in mammals to facilitate survival by dealing with threats or capturing life-sustaining rewards.
本研究考察了对潜在厌恶和高度愉悦结果的情绪唤醒预期的心理生理学。沿着由与潜在惩罚或奖励地点的明显距离所确定的动机梯度,评估了人类大脑反应(事件相关电位)和身体反应(心率、皮肤电导、探测惊吓反射)。使用预示着可能金钱奖励或可能损失的线索模拟了捕食者 - 猎物生存情境;线索似乎逐渐向观察者逼近,直到最后一步,快速的按键反应可以确保奖励或避免惩罚性损失。观察到的警惕性提高和生理动员的预期反应模式与以下观点一致:情绪的生理学基于在哺乳动物中进化而来的行动倾向,通过应对威胁或获取维持生命的奖励来促进生存。