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A Framework for Studying Emotions across Species

期刊

CELL
卷 157, 期 1, 页码 187-200

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CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2014.03.003

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资金

  1. Conte Center grant from NIMH [P50MH094258]
  2. Allen Distinguished Investigator award

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Since the 19th century, there has been disagreement over the fundamental question of whether emotions'' are cause or consequence of their associated behaviors. This question of causation is most directly addressable in genetically tractable model organisms, including invertebrates such as Drosophila. Yet there is ongoing debate about whether such species even have emotions,'' as emotions are typically defined with reference to human behavior and neuroanatomy. Here, we argue that emotional behaviors are a class of behaviors that express internal emotion states. These emotion states exhibit certain general functional and adaptive properties that apply across any specific human emotions like fear or anger, as well as across phylogeny. These general properties, which can be thought of as emotion primitives,'' can be modeled and studied in evolutionarily distant model organisms, allowing functional dissection of their mechanistic bases and tests of their causal relationships to behavior. More generally, our approach not only aims at better integration of such studies in model organisms with studies of emotion in humans, but also suggests a revision of how emotion should be operationalized within psychology and psychiatry.

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