Affective infrastructures: toward a cultural neuropsychology of sport.

Frontiers in evolutionary neuroscience Pub Date : 2011-11-04 eCollection Date: 2011-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnevo.2011.00004
Leslie L Heywood
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Recently there has been a turn toward considerations of embodiment, cognition, and context in sport studies. Many researchers have argued that the traditional focus on clinical psychology and performance enhancement within the discipline is incomplete, and now emphasize the importance of athletes' social and familial contexts in a research paradigm that examines interconnections between movement, cognition, emotion, and the social and cultural context in which movement takes place. While it is important that the sport studies focus is being expanded to consider these interactions, I will argue that this model is still incomplete in that it is missing a fundamental variable - that of our evolutionary neurobiological roots. I will use the work of affective neuroscientists Jaak Panksepp and Stephen Porges to show that because sport so clearly activates neural systems that function at both proximate and ultimate levels of causation, it can be seen to serve fundamental needs for affective balance. A neurobiology of affect shows how the evolution of the mammalian autonomic nervous system has resulted in neurophysiological substrates for affective processes and stress responses, and has wide-ranging implications for sport studies in terms of suggesting what forms of coaching might be the most effective in what context. I propose the term cultural neuropsychology of sport as a descriptor for a model that examines the relationships between neurophysiological substrates and athletes' social and familial contexts in terms of how these variables facilitate or fail to facilitate athletes' neuroceptions of safety, which in turn have a direct impact on their performance. A cultural neuropsychological model of sport might thereby be seen to elaborate a relationship between proximate and ultimate mechanisms in concretely applied ways.

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情感基础设施:走向体育的文化神经心理学。
最近,在体育研究中出现了对体现、认知和语境的考虑。许多研究人员认为,传统的关注临床心理学和学科内的表现增强是不完整的,现在强调运动员的社会和家庭背景的研究范式的重要性,检查运动,认知,情感和运动发生的社会和文化背景之间的相互联系。虽然体育研究的重点被扩展到考虑这些相互作用是很重要的,但我认为这个模型仍然是不完整的,因为它缺少一个基本的变量——我们进化的神经生物学根源。我将使用情感神经科学家Jaak Panksepp和Stephen Porges的研究成果来证明,由于运动如此清楚地激活了在因果关系的近因和终极水平上发挥作用的神经系统,它可以被视为服务于情感平衡的基本需求。情感的神经生物学展示了哺乳动物自主神经系统的进化如何导致情感过程和应激反应的神经生理基础,并对体育研究有广泛的影响,比如在什么情况下哪种形式的教练可能最有效。我提出“体育文化神经心理学”一词,作为一个模型的描述符,该模型研究了神经生理基础与运动员的社会和家庭背景之间的关系,即这些变量如何促进或不促进运动员的安全神经感觉,而安全神经感觉反过来又直接影响他们的表现。因此,体育的文化神经心理学模型可能被视为以具体应用的方式阐述了近因机制和最终机制之间的关系。
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