Who's afraid of Homo sapiens?

Todd M Preuss
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引用次数: 22

Abstract

Understanding how humans differ from other animals, as well as how we are like them, requires comparative investigations. For the purpose of documenting the distinctive features of humans, the most informative research involves comparing humans to our closest relatives-the chimpanzees and other great apes. Psychology and anthropology have maintained a tradition of empirical comparative research on human specializations of cognition. The neurosciences, by contrast, have been dominated by the model-animal research paradigm, which presupposes the commonality of "basic" features of brain organization across species and discourages serious treatment of species differences. As a result, the neurosciences have made little progress in understanding human brain specializations. Recent developments in neuroimaging, genomics, and other non-invasive techniques make it possible to directly compare humans and nonhuman species at levels of organization that were previously inaccessible, offering the hope of gaining a better understanding of the species-specific features of the human brain. This hope will be dashed, however, if chimpanzees and other great ape species become unavailable for even non-invasive research.

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谁害怕智人?
了解人类与其他动物的不同之处,以及我们与它们的相似之处,需要进行比较调查。为了记录人类的独特特征,信息量最大的研究包括将人类与我们最近的亲戚——黑猩猩和其他类人猿——进行比较。心理学和人类学一直保持着对人类认知专业化进行实证比较研究的传统。相比之下,神经科学一直被模型动物研究范式所主导,这种范式预设了不同物种大脑组织的“基本”特征的共性,不鼓励对物种差异进行严肃的处理。因此,神经科学在理解人类大脑专门化方面进展甚微。神经成像、基因组学和其他非侵入性技术的最新发展,使得在以前无法达到的组织水平上直接比较人类和非人类物种成为可能,为更好地了解人类大脑的物种特异性特征提供了希望。然而,如果黑猩猩和其他类人猿物种甚至无法进行非侵入性研究,这一希望将会破灭。
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