Fridman Joseph, Barrett Lisa Feldman, Wormwood Jolie B, Quigley Karen S
Department of Psychology, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States.
Front Psychol. 2019 Sep 11;10:1946. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01946. eCollection 2019.
Law enforcement personnel commonly make decisions in stressful circumstances, where the costs associated with errors are high and sometimes fatal. In this paper, we apply a powerful theoretical approach, the theory of constructed emotion (TCE), to understand decision making under evocative circumstances. This theory posits that the primary purpose of a brain is to predictively regulate physiological resources to coordinate the body's motor activity and learning in the short term, and to meet the body's needs for growth, survival, and reproduction in the long term. This process of managing the brain and body's energy needs, called allostasis, is based on the premise that a brain bodily needs and attempts to meet those needs before they arise (e.g., vestibular activity that raises sympathetic nervous system activity standing), because this is more efficient than responding to energetic needs after the fact. In this view, all mental events-cognition, emotion, perception, and action-are shaped by allostasis, and thus all decision making is embodied, predictive, and concerned with balancing energy needs. We also posit a key role for the autonomic nervous system (ANS) in regulating short-term energy expenditures, such that the ANS influences experience and behavior under stressful circumstances, including police decision making. In this paper, we first explain the core features of the TCE, and then offer insights for understanding police decision making in complex, real-world situations. In so doing, we describe how the TCE can be used to guide future studies of realistic decision making in occupations in which people commonly make decisions in evocative situations or under time pressure, such as in law enforcement.
执法人员通常在压力巨大的情况下做出决策,此时错误带来的代价高昂,有时甚至是致命的。在本文中,我们运用一种强大的理论方法——建构情绪理论(TCE),来理解在引发情绪的情境下的决策过程。该理论认为,大脑的主要目的是预测性地调节生理资源,以便在短期内协调身体的运动活动和学习,并在长期内满足身体的生长、生存和繁殖需求。这种管理大脑和身体能量需求的过程称为应变稳态,其前提是大脑预测身体需求,并试图在这些需求出现之前满足它们(例如,前庭活动会提高交感神经系统活动,以适应站立状态),因为这比事后应对能量需求更有效。从这个角度来看,所有的心理事件——认知、情绪、感知和行动——都是由应变稳态塑造的,因此所有的决策都是具身的、预测性的,并且与平衡能量需求有关。我们还认为自主神经系统(ANS)在调节短期能量消耗方面起着关键作用,以至于自主神经系统会影响压力情境下的体验和行为,包括警察的决策。在本文中,我们首先解释建构情绪理论的核心特征,然后为理解警察在复杂现实世界中的决策提供见解。在此过程中,我们描述了建构情绪理论如何用于指导未来对现实决策的研究,这些决策通常是在引发情绪的情境或时间压力下做出的,比如执法工作。