Living Links, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, and Psychology Department, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2011 Apr;1224:191-206. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2010.05912.x.
Emotions suffuse much of the language employed by students of animal behavior--from "social bonding" to "alarm calls"--yet are carefully avoided as an explicit topic in scientific discourse. Given the increasing interest in human emotional intelligence and the explicit attention in neuroscience to the emotions, both human and nonhuman, the taboo that has reigned for so long in animal behavior research seems outdated. The present review seeks to recall the history of our field in which emotions and instincts were mentioned in the same breath and in which neither psychologists nor biologists felt that animal emotions were off limits. One of the tenets supporting a renewed interest in this topic is to avoid unanswerable questions and to view emotions as mental and bodily states that potentiate behavior appropriate to environmental challenges. Understanding the emotionally deep structure of behavior will be the next frontier in the study of animal behavior.
情绪充斥着动物行为研究者使用的语言——从“社会联系”到“警报叫声”——但在科学话语中,它们被小心翼翼地避免作为一个明确的话题。鉴于人们对人类情绪智力的兴趣日益增加,以及神经科学对人类和非人类情绪的明确关注,在动物行为研究中长期存在的禁忌似乎已经过时。本综述试图回顾我们这一领域的历史,在这个历史中,情绪和本能被同时提及,而且心理学家和生物学家都不认为动物的情绪是不可触及的。支持重新关注这一话题的一个原则是避免无法回答的问题,并将情绪视为增强对环境挑战做出适当行为的心理和身体状态。理解行为的情感深层结构将是动物行为研究的下一个前沿。