Institute for Psychological Research & Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, Leiden University.
Top Cogn Sci. 2020 Oct;12(4):1294-1305. doi: 10.1111/tops.12448. Epub 2019 Jul 29.
Few articles in psychology and cognitive neuroscience do without the promise to get into the "mechanisms underlying" particular psychological phenomena. And yet the progress in our mechanistic understanding of human cognition and behavior must be considered disappointing: Most "explanations" merely classify the phenomenon under investigation as falling into a broader category of (not any better understood) phenomena, specify the context conditions under which the phenomenon is likely to occur, or specify a particular kind of neural activity (such as the activation of a particular brain area) that is correlated with the phenomenon. None of these meets the criteria of a truly mechanistic explanation, which needs to account for phenomena in terms of "a structure performing a function in virtue of its component parts, component operations, and their organization" (Bechtel, 2006). This contribution characterizes the problem and some of its implications and discusses possible solutions.
在心理学和认知神经科学领域,几乎没有哪篇文章不承诺深入研究特定心理现象的“潜在机制”。然而,我们对人类认知和行为的机械理解的进展必须被认为是令人失望的:大多数“解释”仅仅将所研究的现象归类为更广泛的(同样没有被更好地理解)现象类别,指定该现象可能发生的情境条件,或者指定与该现象相关的特定类型的神经活动(例如特定脑区的激活)。这些都不符合真正机械性解释的标准,真正机械性解释需要根据“结构由于其组成部分、组成操作及其组织而执行功能”来解释现象(Bechtel,2006)。本文描述了这个问题及其一些含义,并讨论了可能的解决方案。