Animal Joy: The Neurobiology of Positive Emotions and Their Evolutionary Significance
Introduction: A Paradigm Shift in Zoopsychology
Traditional biology has long avoided anthropomorphic terms, describing animal behavior through the lens of instincts, conditioned reflexes, and the drive for survival. However, over the past three decades, there has been a revolution in cognitive ethology and neurobiology. Accumulated data conclusively demonstrate that many animals are capable of experiencing complex emotional states, including joy — a positive affective state that arises in response to favorable stimuli or situations. Today, the study of animal joy is an interdisciplinary field, relying on strict criteria: observable behavior, physiological correlates (hormonal, neural), and evolutionary logic.
Neurobiological Correlates: The Common Reward System
The key evidence for the existence of positive emotions in animals is the presence of a conservative (i.e., common to many species) brain reward system.
Dopamine System: The mesolimbic pathway plays a central role, where dopamine is produced in the ventral area of the striatum and enters the nucleus accumbens. Activation of this pathway induces a subjective feeling of pleasure and anticipation. Studies on rats using microelectrodes have shown that neurons in this area "light up" not only when receiving a reward (food, water) but also when a signal predicting it is presented.
Opoid System: Endogenous opoids (endorphins, enkephalins) modulate the feeling of pleasure and reduce pain. Play in puppies or grooming in primates is accompanied by the release of these substances, creating a state of well-being and social bonding.
Neuroplasticity: Positive experiences literally change the brain. In animals living in an enriched environment (with toys, social contacts, mazes), the volume of the hippocampus, responsible for memory, and the density of neural connections in the cortex increase.
Interesting Fact: Primates, including macaque ...
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