Centre for Behavioural Biology, Bristol Veterinary School, University of Bristol, UK.
Centre for Behavioural Biology, Bristol Veterinary School, University of Bristol, UK.
Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2020 May;112:144-163. doi: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2020.01.025. Epub 2020 Jan 25.
The scientific study of animal affect (emotion) is an area of growing interest. Whilst research on mechanism and causation has predominated, the study of function is less advanced. This is not due to a lack of hypotheses; in both humans and animals, affective states are frequently proposed to play a pivotal role in coordinating adaptive responses and decisions. However, exactly how they might do this (what processes might implement this function) is often left rather vague. Here we propose a framework for integrating animal affect and decision-making that is couched in modern decision theory and employs an operational definition that aligns with dimensional concepts of core affect and renders animal affect empirically tractable. We develop a model of how core affect, including short-term (emotion-like) and longer-term (mood-like) states, influence decision-making via processes that we label affective options, affective predictions, and affective outcomes and which correspond to similar concepts in schema of the links between human emotion and decision-making. Our framework is generalisable across species and generates questions for future research.
动物情感(情绪)的科学研究是一个日益受到关注的领域。虽然对机制和因果关系的研究占据主导地位,但对功能的研究却相对滞后。这并不是因为缺乏假说;在人类和动物中,情感状态经常被认为在协调适应性反应和决策方面起着关键作用。然而,它们究竟是如何做到这一点的(哪些过程可能实现这一功能)往往相当模糊。在这里,我们提出了一个将动物情感和决策结合起来的框架,该框架基于现代决策理论,并采用了与核心情感的维度概念相一致的操作定义,使动物情感具有可实证性。我们开发了一个模型,说明核心情感(包括短期(类似情绪的)和长期(类似情绪的)状态)如何通过我们称之为情感选择、情感预测和情感结果的过程来影响决策,这些过程与人类情感和决策之间联系的图式中的类似概念相对应。我们的框架具有跨物种的通用性,并为未来的研究提出了问题。