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For most of human history few people got to be old. Older persons are not as well pepared to face stresses as younger persons because of evolutionary factors. So, it is necessary for older persons to consider the effects of their lifestyle choices on their ability to age successfully. Awareness of these factors is important for our appreciation of the impact which our activities have on our aging. For most of the past 100,000 years of human history we were living in a different environment than the one we have today. The genes we have now were chosen through natural selection because they enhanced the survival of our ancestors who were living in these different environments. This view provides valuable insights into the role environmental factors have in determining maintenance of function with aging. This chapter presents the vital perspective that what we do affects the accomplishment of our goals for aging. These goals must go beyond survival and avoidance of disease and also strive for maintenance of the highest level of fitness and resistance to loss of function (reserve capacities) so that we can resist the declines with aging, as well as the challenges which inevitably occur.
The goal of affective neuroscience research is to integrate as many measures as possible when attempting to gauge affective experience. This chapter examines the value of objective and subjective measures used in affective neuroscience. It presents examples that showcase the use of the response indices, illustrating how objective and subjective measures operate uniquely and offer opportunities to investigate the properties of emotion from different vantage points. The chapter addresses some limitations to measurement and comments on work that is pushing research forward by combining measures with inventive methods. Future research that investigates deeply experiential aspects of the human emotional life will benefit from employing a network of measures to provide a more in-depth understanding of the neurophenomenology of emotion. The challenge before affective neuroscientists is to include and integrate multiple indices from both subjective and objective categories of measurement to best capture the mental and neural bases of emotional life.
This chapter clarifies the nature and semantic properties of metacognition in non-humans. As is the case for every philosophical inquiry concerning animal minds, studying animal metacognition should provide new perspectives on the structure of mental content and on mental activity in general. This exploration proceeds in four steps. First, the experimental evidence for animal metacognition is presented and the difficulties of a metarepresentational view on metacognition summarized. Second, the possibility of alternative, non-propositional semantic structures is discussed. Third, a specific representational format that might be sufficient for animal metacognition to develop is examined. Finally, some objections are addressed, and further developments of the proposal are considered. The question of whether human metacognition uses a separate feature-placing format, or is absorbed within the propositional mode of thinking, is still open, and current research may soon come up with interesting new constraints.
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