Joiner Thomas E, Stanley Ian H
Psychiatry. 2016 Summer;79(2):107-119. doi: 10.1080/00332747.2016.1142800.
When perceiving a dangerous predation threat, mammalian and other species activate antipredator defensive reactions. These include the seemingly paradoxical-but compatible-activation of overarousal (e.g., agitation, insomnia) and "shutdown" (e.g., mutism, withdrawal) states. Acute suicidal crises, too, are characterized by the co-occurrence of overarousal and shutdown behaviors. In the minutes, hours, and days prior to one's death by suicide, it is not uncommon for one to be simultaneously agitated and socially withdrawn, states that resemble antipredator defensive reactions. In this article, we present empirical, clinical, and philosophical grist for our conjecture that antipredator defensive reactions may serve as a useful way to understand the phenomenology of a serious suicidal crisis, and we reflect on the implications that soon-to-be suicide decedents are simultaneously killer and victim.
当感知到危险的捕食威胁时,哺乳动物和其他物种会激活反捕食防御反应。这些反应包括看似矛盾但又相互兼容的过度兴奋(如烦躁、失眠)和“关闭”(如缄默、退缩)状态的激活。急性自杀危机同样以过度兴奋和关闭行为同时出现为特征。在自杀死亡前的几分钟、几小时和几天里,一个人同时出现烦躁和社交退缩的情况并不罕见,这些状态类似于反捕食防御反应。在本文中,我们提出了经验、临床和哲学依据,以支持我们的猜想,即反捕食防御反应可能是理解严重自杀危机现象学的一种有用方式,并且我们思考了即将自杀的死者同时是杀手和受害者这一观点的含义。