行为主义
心理学
机制(生物学)
联想学习
一般化
拖延
透视图(图形)
动物行为学
认知心理学
主流
认知科学
消光(光学矿物学)
社会心理学
认识论
心理治疗师
计算机科学
生态学
人工智能
古生物学
哲学
生物
神学
作者
Jeansok J. Kim,Min Whan Jung
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cobeha.2018.02.007
摘要
Fear is considered an integral part of the brain's defensive mechanism that evolved to protect animals and humans from predation and other ecological threats. Hence, it is logical to study fear from the perspective of antipredator-survival behaviors and circuits by sampling a range of threatening situations that organisms are likely to encounter in the wild. In the past several decades, however, mainstream fear research has focused on the importance of associative learning; that is, how animals become frightened of innocuous cues as consequences of their contingent pairing with aversive events. While significant discoveries have been made, contemporary fear models derived from learning studies are likely to provide only a partial picture of the brain's fear system because they cannot simulate the dynamic range of risky situations in nature that require various adaptive actions and decisions. This review considers two different approaches to study fear, grounded on behaviorism and ethology and examines their contributions in revealing the naturalistic workings of fear in guiding and shaping behavior as animals make real-world choices.
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