Conlin Juliet A
Center for Adaptive Behavior and Cognition, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany.
Prog Brain Res. 2009;174:109-17. doi: 10.1016/S0079-6123(09)01310-7.
The spatial environments in which humans and animals navigate tend to be complex and dynamic, and are often characterized by information shortage. Getting around is a fundamental, adaptive problem for many individuals, but one they are capable of solving with remarkable speed and accuracy. In this chapter, it is argued that what on occasion appears to be a complex behavior based on internal representations is often the outcome of simple mechanisms - termed fast and frugal heuristics - and their interaction with the environment. Thus, the spatial navigation decisions made by individuals can be characterized as "good enough" rather than optimal, and are often crucially dependent on the environments in which they operate. This chapter reviews approaches from navigation research that differ in their emphasis on environment versus internal spatial representations in explaining movement behavior and offers an explanation of human movement behavior in terms of relatively simple mechanisms that can exploit properties of the task environment. The main contention put forward here is that a large part of explanatory power would be lost by focusing merely on the underlying cognitive processes without reference to the structure of the environment(s) in which those processes operate.
人类和动物在其中导航的空间环境往往复杂多变,且常常具有信息匮乏的特点。四处走动对许多个体来说是一个基本的适应性问题,但他们能够以惊人的速度和准确性解决这个问题。在本章中,有人认为,有时看似基于内部表征的复杂行为往往是简单机制(称为快速节俭启发式)及其与环境相互作用的结果。因此,个体做出的空间导航决策可以被描述为“足够好”而非最优,并且通常关键取决于它们所运作的环境。本章回顾了导航研究中的不同方法,这些方法在解释运动行为时对环境与内部空间表征的强调有所不同,并从相对简单的机制角度对人类运动行为进行了解释,这些机制能够利用任务环境的特性。这里提出的主要观点是,如果仅仅关注潜在的认知过程而不考虑这些过程所运作的环境结构,就会失去很大一部分解释力。