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Journal Article

Citation

Barrett LF, Finlay BL. Curr. Opin. Behav. Sci. 2018; 24: 172-179.

Affiliation

Behavioral and Evolutionary Neuroscience Group, Department of Psychology, Cornell University.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.cobeha.2018.10.001

PMID

31157289

PMCID

PMC6541420

Abstract

Scientists have long studied the actions that impact basic survival in various domains of life, such as defense, foraging, reproduction, thermoregulation, and so on, as if such actions will reveal the nature of emotion. Each domain of survival came to be characterized by a repertoire of distinct actions, and each action was thought to be caused by a dedicated neural circuit, called a survival circuit. Survival circuits are thought to be triggered by sensory events in the world, quickly producing obligatory, stereotypic reflexes as well as more flexible, deliberate responses. In this paper, we consider recent evidence from behavioral ecology that even so-called "reflexes" are better understood as purposeful, flexible actions that unfold across a range of temporal trajectories. They are highly context-dependent and tailored to the requirements of the situation. We then consider evidence from the neuroscience of motor control that motor actions are assembled by neural populations, not triggered by simple circuits. We end by considering the value of these suggestions for understanding the species-general vs. species-specific contributions to emotion.


Language: en

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