Ceylan Mehmet Emin, Dönmez Aslıhan, Ülsalver Barış Önen
Department of Psychology, Üsküdar University, Istanbul, Turkey.
Department of Psychiatry, Gazi University Hospital Beşevler, Ankara, Turkey.
Cerebellum. 2015 Dec;14(6):711-21. doi: 10.1007/s12311-015-0675-7.
What distinguishes human beings from other living organisms is that a human perceives himself as a "self". The self is developed hierarchially in a multi-layered process, which is based on the evolutionary maturation of the nervous system and patterns according to the rules and demands of the external world. Many researchers have attempted to explain the different aspects of the self, as well as the related neural substrates. In this paper, we first review the previously proposed ideas regarding the neurobiology of the self. We then suggest a new hypothesis regarding the hierarchial self, which proposes that the self is developed at three stages: subjective, objective, and reflective selves. In the second part, we attempt to answer the question "Why do we need a self?" We therefore explain that different parts of the self developed in an effort to identify stability in space, stability against constantly changing objects, and stability against changing cognitions. Finally, we discuss the role of the cerebellum as the neural substrate for the self.
人类与其他生物的区别在于,人类将自己视为一个“自我”。自我是在一个多层次的过程中逐步发展起来的,这个过程基于神经系统的进化成熟以及根据外部世界的规则和需求形成的模式。许多研究人员试图解释自我的不同方面以及相关的神经基础。在本文中,我们首先回顾先前提出的关于自我神经生物学的观点。然后,我们提出一个关于层次化自我的新假设,该假设认为自我在三个阶段发展:主观自我、客观自我和反思自我。在第二部分,我们试图回答“我们为什么需要一个自我?”这个问题。因此,我们解释说,自我的不同部分是为了在空间中识别稳定性、抵御不断变化的物体以及抵御变化的认知而发展起来的。最后,我们讨论小脑作为自我的神经基础的作用。