The Curious Thing About Curiosity
We exasperate our parents with an endless
series of WHYs beginning around two years of age. Non-human animals do not
appear to have a need to wonder why things are as they are. Studies put
Chimpanzees’ intelligence between that of a 2 - 5-year-old human depending on
the study.
But
chimpanzees show no evidence of wondering why something occurs; they lack a
curiosity about cause and effect and focus only on the “what” or “how”. A chimp
witnesses an older chimp retrieving termites from a hole in the ground with a
stick and mimics the behavior but doesn’t consider why it works.
By contrast, children quickly understand that
effects are inextricably linked to causes. A child is disciplined and mentally
replays the events leading up to the punishment to understand what caused the
unpleasant consequence. Or a child may crawl around wondering what it would be
like to be a puppy. Human curiosity reaches beyond that necessary to
effectively function in the environment.
The answer is found by studying the subject of
curiosity. The academic research into curiosity is surprisingly complicated and
requires extensive brain imaging, cognitive experiments, and an understanding of
the effect of chemical processes on human behavior. I will skip the technical
details and risk oversimplifying the answer by summarizing the two pertinent
categories of curiosity at issue. Epistemic
curiosity (EC) is motivated by the sheer enjoyment of exploring new
physical and mental territories. Perceptual
curiosity (PC) motivates us to avoid distress and potential harm that threatens our ability to survive
and reproduce. Humans experience both types of curiosity while non-human
animals experience only PC. It is EC that compels us to ask why and to explore
abstract ideas, engage in creative endeavors, and undertake scientific
research. Unlike, PC, we pursue EC as a rewarding activity. Some researchers
claim it is an essential component of our survival as a species, like eating
and sex.
Perceptual
Curiosity.
When we are startled by an unexpected threat
or an unresolved ambiguity, we are driven to learn to recognize under what
circumstances we might again encounter such an event. If a food source causes
illness or an unpleasant sensation animals including humans avoid it in the
future. Curiosity causes animals to identify predictors of distress and
punishments, or alert them to unexpected things that might be harmful, or are
not understood. Evolution has weeded out creatures that lack PC so it is no
surprise that all cognizant animals have some variant of it.
Functional MRI (fMRI) |
Studies
using fMRI with humans reveals that when something puzzling happens, when danger
suddenly appears, or when there is sudden unresolved ambiguity, different
portions of the brain become active in sequence. First, the incident activates
portions of the brain that react to conflict and provokes intense awareness. Next as
surprise and confusion resolve, there is a sense of relief and the reward
processing part of the brain activates. Finally, a portion of the brain locks
in memory of the event.
The PC response increases the likelihood that the individual, and therefore the species, can survive and reproduce. While lower forms of life (worms, insects, reptiles, etc.) don’t have brains organized in the same manner as humans, they do have mechanisms that cause the organism to avoid fatalities. Indeed, successful evolution could not have occurred without it.
Epistemic
Curiosity.
The technologies that allow exploration of
chemical and brain activities (fMRI, tracing chemical activity in our bodies,
cleverly designed cognitive experiments, etc.) reveal how EC differs from PC
and why it is unique to humans.
Unlike PC, EC reaches beyond information
required for survival and reproduction. We each accumulate knowledge in
particular areas of interest. When we find gaps or disparities in our
knowledge, we are compelled to learn more, not because we are distressed by
ambiguity, but because we anticipate an emotional and psychological reward from
filling the void. As you might guess, the parts of the brain that respond to
rewards are quite different than those that respond to distress. In particular,
dopamine is released by certain neurons to facilitate transmitting signals to
other neurons. Specific dopamine pathways specialize in motivating reward
oriented behavior. Dopamine drives EC.
Why Is EC Uniquely Human?
Scientists speculate that these unique
characteristics have evolutionary roots.
●
There is a physiological trade-off
between a large body and a large brain; we can’t have both for many reasons
(e.g., efficiently walking upright requires a slim torso that cannot safely
give birth to an infant with a large head). Thus we had to seek food sources
that have high caloric efficiency. EC motivated us to explore a variety of food
sources in a variety of locations.
●
A diet rich in meat has high
energy content; cooking with fire reduced calories spent chewing; shortened
intestines increased the efficiency of digestion.
●
Walking upright reduced the energy
needed to acquire food compared to moving about using knees and knuckles.
●
Our EC likely was enhanced by the
rewards of exploring new food sources, opportunistic uses of tools by walking
upright, imagining shelters where there were no caves, traveling longer
distances using fewer calories by walking uptight.
Whether EC eventually will be
a curse or a blessing remains to be seen. Perhaps we should frequently remind
ourselves to devote more time imagining and creating a more peaceful world --
let us hope nature’s course is not beyond the authority invested in its most
advanced creatures.
Word of the day: teleology
The word teleology
has two Greek roots, telos (purpose) and logos (explanation). As the roots
of the word imply, teleology explains phenomena in terms of ends rather than means
or causes. For example, rather than explain the world as a
purposeless collection of phenomena randomly caused by the laws of physics, teleology would explain things as a cohesive system having a purpose-designed by an omnipotent
intelligence, or) as an inevitable progression from a “Big Bang” towards a
“Big Freeze” or a “Big Crunch”, or as simply an orchestra of living creatures whose
destiny is governed by the laws of nature with no other objective than to
harmonize and hopefully enjoy the performance.
Delightful. Sharing.
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