Real-Life Neuroscience: An Ecological Approach to Brain and Behavior Research
- PMID: 31408614
- DOI: 10.1177/1745691619856350
Real-Life Neuroscience: An Ecological Approach to Brain and Behavior Research
Abstract
Owing to advances in neuroimaging technology, the past couple of decades have witnessed a surge of research on brain mechanisms that underlie human cognition. Despite the immense development in cognitive neuroscience, the vast majority of neuroimaging experiments examine isolated agents carrying out artificial tasks in sensory and socially deprived environments. Thus, the understanding of the mechanisms of various domains in cognitive neuroscience, including social cognition and episodic memory, is sorely lacking. Here we focus on social and memory research as representatives of cognitive functions and propose that mainstream, lab-based experimental designs in these fields suffer from two fundamental limitations, pertaining to person-dependent and situation-dependent factors. The person-dependent factor addresses the issue of limiting the active role of the participants in lab-based paradigms that may interfere with their sense of agency and embodiment. The situation-dependent factor addresses the issue of the artificial decontextualized environment in most available paradigms. Building on recent findings showing that real-life as opposed to controlled experimental paradigms involve different mechanisms, we argue that adopting a real-life approach may radically change our understanding of brain and behavior. Therefore, we advocate in favor of a paradigm shift toward a nonreductionist approach, exploiting portable technology in semicontrolled environments, to explore behavior in real life.
Keywords: Social interactions; behavioral; episodic memory; memory; methodology; neuroscience; social cognition.
Comment in
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The Reality of "Real-Life" Neuroscience: A Commentary on Shamay-Tsoory and Mendelsohn (2019).Perspect Psychol Sci. 2021 Mar;16(2):461-465. doi: 10.1177/1745691620917354. Epub 2020 Apr 21. Perspect Psychol Sci. 2021. PMID: 32316849 Free PMC article.
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