Full-text resources of PSJD and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

PL EN


Preferences help
enabled [disable] Abstract
Number of results
2002 | 62 | 2 | 99-110

Article title

Affective percept and voluntary action: A hypothesis

Authors

Selected contents from this journal

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
. I present a hypothesis concerning the neuronal, mental and behavioral effects of all kinds of affective (emotional) stimuli, i.e., of unpleasant and pleasant stimuli. I use the term stimulus in its broad sense. Affective stimuli evoke two associated percepts: ?cognitive? and ?affective?. A food in the mouth, for example, evokes the gustatory percept and the percept of pleasure. However, affective percepts are unstable parts of cognitive-affective compounds. Five types of affective percepts are pain, fear, pleasure, ?desire? and appetite in the broad sense of these words. Desire is evoked by inadequate pleasant stimuli. Affective percepts are ?lower? or ?higher?. The latter are not directly associated with bodily needs. Esthetic and social percepts are higher, for example. Although pain and pleasure are essentially innate, they can be modified by sensory experience. Alimentary and esthetic preferences and social values are modifiable, for example. The neurons of pain and fear and of the unpleasant components of desire and appetite motivate four types of voluntary actions. These are, respectively, escape, avoidance, ?optimization? and approach actions. All these actions eliminate the motivating displeasure. In addition, avoidance actions protect from the signaled pain, optimization actions increase the existing pleasure and approach actions provide the signaled pleasure. Thus, voluntary actions associated with different percepts occur according to one universal principle. Voluntary actions are ?internal? and behavioral. During internal actions a goal and then an action plan are decided. These actions often provide the images of the goal stimuli and of particular movements.

Contributors

author

References

Document Type

ARTICLE

Publication order reference

B. Zernicki, Department of Neurophysiology, Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, 3 Pasteur St., 02-093 Warsaw, Poland

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.element-from-psjc-66c386e7-cf91-373b-8f79-2081c95cc9a0
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.