McVeigh Kieran, Kleckner Ian R, Quigley Karen S, Satpute Ajay B
Department of Psychology, Northeastern University.
Department of Pain and Translational Symptom Science, University of Maryland School of Nursing.
Emotion. 2024 Mar;24(2):506-521. doi: 10.1037/emo0001265. Epub 2023 Aug 21.
Is there a universal mapping of physiology to emotion, or do these mappings vary substantially by person or situation? Psychologists, philosophers, and neuroscientists have debated this question for decades. Most previous studies have focused on differentiating emotions on the basis of accompanying autonomic responses using analytical approaches that often assume within-category homogeneity. In the present study, we took an alternative approach to this question. We determined the extent to which the relationship between subjective experience and autonomic reactivity generalizes across, or depends upon, the individual and situation for instances of a single emotion category, specifically, fear. Electrodermal activity and cardiac activity-two autonomic measures that are often assumed to show robust relationships with instances of fear-were recorded while participants reported fear experience in response to dozens of fear-evoking videos related to three distinct situations: spiders, heights, and social encounters. We formally translated assumptions from diverse theoretical models into a common framework for model comparison analyses. Results exceedingly favored a model that assumed situation-dependency in the relationship between fear experience and autonomic reactivity, with subject variance also significant but constrained by situation. Models that assumed generalization across situations and/or individuals performed much worse by comparison. These results call into question the assumption of generalizability of autonomic-subjective mappings across instances of fear, as required in translational research from nonhuman animals to humans, and advance a situated approach to understanding the autonomic correlates of fear experience. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
生理与情绪之间是否存在通用的映射关系,还是这些映射关系会因个体或情境的不同而有很大差异?心理学家、哲学家和神经科学家围绕这个问题已经争论了数十年。以往的大多数研究都聚焦于利用通常假定类别内同质性的分析方法,根据伴随的自主反应来区分情绪。在本研究中,我们针对这个问题采用了另一种方法。我们确定了主观体验与自主反应性之间的关系在单一情绪类别(具体而言是恐惧)的实例中,在个体和情境之间的泛化程度,或者说这种关系对个体和情境的依赖程度。在参与者观看与三种不同情境(蜘蛛、高处和社交接触)相关的数十个引发恐惧的视频并报告恐惧体验时,记录了皮肤电活动和心脏活动这两种通常被认为与恐惧实例有紧密关系的自主测量指标。我们将来自不同理论模型的假设正式转化为一个用于模型比较分析的通用框架。结果非常支持一种模型,该模型假定恐惧体验与自主反应性之间的关系存在情境依赖性,个体差异也很显著,但受情境限制。相比之下,假定跨情境和/或个体具有泛化性的模型表现要差得多。这些结果对从非人类动物到人类的转化研究中所要求的自主-主观映射在恐惧实例中的可泛化性假设提出了质疑,并推进了一种情境化方法来理解恐惧体验的自主相关因素。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2024美国心理学会,保留所有权利)