对使用计算模型来调查情感状态,情感障碍和非人类动物福利的入门。

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Vikki Neville, Michael Mendl, Elizabeth S Paul, Peggy Seriès, Peter Dayan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

动物情感和情绪状态的客观测量对于情感障碍的临床前研究和评估实验室动物和其他动物的福利是必不可少的。然而,这些情感状态测量的发展和验证提出了一个挑战,部分原因是情感与其行为,生理和认知特征之间的关系是复杂的。在这里,我们建议,通过计算模型提供的潜在的、但不可观察的、调解这些特征的过程的清晰特征应该提供更好的见解。尽管这种计算精神病学方法已广泛应用于人类健康和疾病研究,但转化计算精神病学研究仍然很少。我们解释了用动物研究数据构建计算模型如何在进一步理解情感障碍的病因、相关情感状态和可能涉及的潜在认知过程方面发挥关键作用。最后,我们概述了一个简单的计算分析所涉及的基本步骤。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A primer on the use of computational modelling to investigate affective states, affective disorders and animal welfare in non-human animals.

A primer on the use of computational modelling to investigate affective states, affective disorders and animal welfare in non-human animals.

Objective measures of animal emotion-like and mood-like states are essential for preclinical studies of affective disorders and for assessing the welfare of laboratory and other animals. However, the development and validation of measures of these affective states poses a challenge partly because the relationships between affect and its behavioural, physiological and cognitive signatures are complex. Here, we suggest that the crisp characterisations offered by computational modelling of the underlying, but unobservable, processes that mediate these signatures should provide better insights. Although this computational psychiatry approach has been widely used in human research in both health and disease, translational computational psychiatry studies remain few and far between. We explain how building computational models with data from animal studies could play a pivotal role in furthering our understanding of the aetiology of affective disorders, associated affective states and the likely underlying cognitive processes involved. We end by outlining the basic steps involved in a simple computational analysis.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
3.40%
发文量
64
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience (CABN) offers theoretical, review, and primary research articles on behavior and brain processes in humans. Coverage includes normal function as well as patients with injuries or processes that influence brain function: neurological disorders, including both healthy and disordered aging; and psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and depression. CABN is the leading vehicle for strongly psychologically motivated studies of brain–behavior relationships, through the presentation of papers that integrate psychological theory and the conduct and interpretation of the neuroscientific data. The range of topics includes perception, attention, memory, language, problem solving, reasoning, and decision-making; emotional processes, motivation, reward prediction, and affective states; and individual differences in relevant domains, including personality. Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience is a publication of the Psychonomic Society.
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