| Literature DB >> 31068849 |
Simeng Gu1, Fushun Wang1,2, Nitesh P Patel3, James A Bourgeois3,4, Jason H Huang2,3.
Abstract
Emotion plays a crucial role, both in general human experience and in psychiatric illnesses. Despite the importance of emotion, the relative lack of objective methodologies to scientifically studying emotional phenomena limits our current understanding and thereby calls for the development of novel methodologies, such us the study of illustrative animal models. Analysis of Drosophila and other insects has unlocked new opportunities to elucidate the behavioral phenotypes of fundamentally emotional phenomena. Here we propose an integrative model of basic emotions based on observations of this animal model. The basic emotions are internal states that are modulated by neuromodulators, and these internal states are externally expressed as certain stereotypical behaviors, such as instinct, which is proposed as ancient mechanisms of survival. There are four kinds of basic emotions: happiness, sadness, fear, and anger, which are differentially associated with three core affects: reward (happiness), punishment (sadness), and stress (fear and anger). These core affects are analogous to the three primary colors (red, yellow, and blue) in that they are combined in various proportions to result in more complex "higher order" emotions, such as love and aesthetic emotion. We refer to our proposed model of emotions as called the "Three Primary Color Model of Basic Emotions."Entities:
Keywords: Drosophila; basic emotions; core affection; emotion flow; evolution; instinct; monoamine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31068849 PMCID: PMC6491740 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00781
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Core affects and basic emotions. (A) All emotions, including the basic emotions, can find their locations in the circle of the Circumplex, which means that different emotions have different arousal or hedonic parameters. The reason for basic emotions being “basic” is that they can also be arranged on the special location in a two-dimension coordinate plane. And the typical locations of the four basic emotions suggest that they have different parameters (core affects): happiness and sadness are due to the hedonic value of the stimulus (physiological needs), while the fear and anger depend on the way the stimulus occurs (safety needs). (B) The locations of basic emotions in the dimensions are also decided by the stimulus that induce them, and also in the behavioral responses. The stimulus has two features: whether it fits into our needs (hedonic value) or whether it happens expected (arousal). The behavioral responses the emotion induced has two features: approach (hedonic value) and agitation (arousal value).
FIGURE 2DA cells in the Drosophila brain. An anterior view of DA neurons in the Drosophila brain. Labeling of DA cells and processes was achieved by a tyrosine-hydroxylase enhancer trap driving expression of green fluorescent protein (White et al., 2010), Scale bar, 100 μm (courtesy of Dr. Frank Hirth, King’s College London).
FIGURE 3Three-primary-color model of core affects. The three monoamine neuromodulators are the substrates for three core affects (norepinephrine-stress, dopamine-reward, 5-HT-punishment). And the three core affects constitute the basic emotions: stress-fear and anger, reward-happiness or joy, punishment-sadness or disgust.