Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Miami.
Department of Psychology, Emory University.
Am Psychol. 2016 Dec;71(9):898-899. doi: 10.1037/amp0000119.
This article responds to commentaries written by Warren Tryon (2016) and Arthur Staats (2016) concerning Schwartz, Lilienfeld, Meca, and Sauvigné (2016). In this reply, we reiterate our key thesis-that psychology, and the problems it addresses, are likely best approached from multiple levels of analysis. Unlike Tryon, we are not convinced that neural networks and computational neuroscience provide a single template through which all of psychology can be integrated. We are in agreement with Staats that attempts to reduce psychological phenomena to neural events alone are likely to be misleading and unproductive. One important example where such reductionism has been alive and well is addiction, where prominent biomedical models have defined addiction as a "brain disease." Our reply article concludes by arguing that a multilevel approach to psychology is essential in guiding hiring practices, funding agency priorities, and training students. (PsycINFO Database Record
这篇文章回应了 Warren Tryon(2016)和 Arthur Staats(2016)对 Schwartz、Lilienfeld、Meca 和 Sauvigné(2016)的评论。在这篇回复中,我们重申了我们的主要论点,即心理学及其所解决的问题,最好从多个分析层次来研究。与 Tryon 不同,我们并不认为神经网络和计算神经科学为所有心理学提供了一个统一的模板。我们同意 Staats 的观点,即试图将心理现象简化为神经事件本身可能会产生误导和无成效。一个重要的例子是成瘾,其中突出的生物医学模型将成瘾定义为“大脑疾病”,这种还原论在成瘾领域仍然存在。我们的回复文章最后认为,心理学的多层次方法对于指导招聘实践、资助机构的优先事项和培训学生是必不可少的。