Publication | Closed Access
Psychological entropy: A framework for understanding uncertainty-related anxiety.
573
Citations
131
References
2012
Year
Affective NeuroscienceCognitionUncertain ReasoningSocial SciencesPsychologyExperimental Decision MakingPsychological EntropyBehavioral AffordancesCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesInformation TheoryHigh UncertaintyBehavioral NeuroscienceInternal EntropyInformation Processing (Psychology)Experimental PsychologySocial CognitionAnticipatory ProcessUncertainty ManagementAdaptive Emotion
Entropy, a concept derived from thermodynamics and information theory, describes the amount of uncertainty and disorder within a system. Self-organizing systems engage in a continual dialogue with the environment and must adapt themselves to changing circumstances to keep internal entropy at a manageable level. We propose the entropy model of uncertainty (EMU), an integrative theoretical framework that applies the idea of entropy to the human information system to understand uncertainty-related anxiety. Four major tenets of EMU are proposed: (a) Uncertainty poses a critical adaptive challenge for any organism, so individuals are motivated to keep it at a manageable level; (b) uncertainty emerges as a function of the conflict between competing perceptual and behavioral affordances; (c) adopting clear goals and belief structures helps to constrain the experience of uncertainty by reducing the spread of competing affordances; and (d) uncertainty is experienced subjectively as anxiety and is associated with activity in the anterior cingulate cortex and with heightened noradrenaline release. By placing the discussion of uncertainty management, a fundamental biological necessity, within the framework of information theory and self-organizing systems, our model helps to situate key psychological processes within a broader physical, conceptual, and evolutionary context.
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