From this article. Abstract:
"While emotion is a central component of human health and well-being,
traditional approaches to understanding its biological function have
been wanting. A dynamic systems model, however, broadly redefines and
recasts emotion as a primary sensory system—perhaps the first sensory
system to have emerged, serving the ancient autopoietic function of
“self-regulation.” Drawing upon molecular biology and revelations from
the field of epigenetics, the model suggests that human emotional
perceptions provide an ongoing stream of “self-relevant” sensory
information concerning optimally adaptive states between the organism
and its immediate environment, along with coupled behavioral corrections
that honor a universal self-regulatory logic, one still encoded within
cellular signaling and immune functions. Exemplified by the fundamental
molecular circuitry of sensorimotor control in the E coli
bacterium, the model suggests that the hedonic (affective) categories
emerge directly from positive and negative feedback processes, their
good/bad binary appraisals relating to dual self-regulatory behavioral
regimes—evolutionary purposes, through which organisms actively
participate in natural selection, and through which humans can interpret
optimal or deficit states of balanced being and becoming. The
self-regulatory sensory paradigm transcends anthropomorphism, unites
divergent theoretical perspectives and isolated bodies of literature,
while challenging time-honored assumptions. While suppressive regulatory
strategies abound, it suggests that emotions are better understood as
regulating us, providing a service crucial to all semantic language,
learning systems, evaluative decision-making, and fundamental to optimal
physical, mental, and social health."
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