Science behind the bore feeling?

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Boredom serves significant biological and evolutionary purposes, acting as a signal that prompts action and engagement. It arises when neural activity in specific brain circuits diminishes, indicating a need for stimulation. Both humans and animals, such as cats, experience boredom, which encourages exploration and skill development. The evolutionary aspect of boredom is crucial, particularly in challenging environments where it drives individuals to seek new experiences and adapt. The balance between familiarity and novelty is essential; too much of either can lead to boredom or stress. Psychological theories, including the Yerkes-Dodson law and the Bayesian brain approach, frame boredom as a multidimensional issue linked to learning and survival. Ultimately, boredom is a complex phenomenon that reflects a conscious awareness of one's environment and the need for purposeful engagement.
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Are there any biological/evolutionary reasons for human to need the feeling of being bored?
What would happen if one cannot get bored?
Would a cat/dog/ant/fly also get bored?
Are there medicine that changes bore feeling?
Just some wild questions since i am getting bored :D

Dictionary says the definition of bored is something like "uninterested because of frequent exposure or indulgence". What decipline of psychology/biology should I look into if I want more information?
 
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The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity. - Ellen Parr
 
ah, i like the idea and how this quote sounds. :D
BTW, is it possible to get someone to be curious on something which is boring? ... it would be very good if i have a theory to control the amount of curiosity in my mind and the "direction" of this curiosity :D
 
luben said:
ah, i like the idea and how this quote sounds. :D
BTW, is it possible to get someone to be curious on something which is boring? ... it would be very good if i have a theory to control the amount of curiosity in my mind and the "direction" of this curiosity :D

Sensitization/desensitization can change boredom levels with respect to a particular stimulus.
 
When cats get bored, they go looking for amusement. Ours invent games such as unplugging USB & LAN cables...

( At least this Browser_PC's XP doesn't mind hot-plugging USB devices: My old '98 CAD-Tower_PC needed rebooting... ;- )
 
Both biological and evolutionary reasons are there for existence of boredom. When the level of certain activities, be it physical or mental, goes below certain point, you feel bored. It happens when neural activity in certain circuits is less intense. Boredom occurs when those specific parts of the brain are "idle". Of course, this is very simplified.

The reason for boredom is that it calls for action. It makes you experience pleasant feelings when you go from boredom to action. This helps kittens to develop their motor skills, hunting abilities, mental abilities etc. In an adult cat it helps the cat to maintain its fitness, motor skills, alertness and a huge variety of other benefits that the cat gets when it plays.

The same thing is for people too. A person who doesn't get bored (when idle) may just lie there for as long as he thinks there is nothing to do. Such a person would be in a disadvantage compared to a person who would start working on something, or maybe just run in circles, learn a new skill or acquire knowledge.

For this reason boredom is very important for evolutionary reasons too. In the case of hostile environment, scarce food resources, changing seasons and unexpected weather hazards the level and kind of boredom, for example mental boredom, physical boredom, plays a huge role in surviving.
 
luben said:
Dictionary says the definition of bored is something like "uninterested because of frequent exposure or indulgence".

This dictionary definition highlights that this is about an optimisation between familiarity and novelty. So you are having fun when the world is offering learning experiences, but not overloading you with new stuff. And you get bored when stuff is over-learned and lacks challenge.

So in terms of psychological theory, you have the old arousal curve literature - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yerkes–Dodson_law

Or in today's neuroscience, you could frame this within the Bayesian brain approach to neural architecture - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayesian_brain

So between the boredom of too much familiarity and the stress of too much novelty, you have the happy balance of feeling engaged. The level of challenge is optimal.
 
apeiron said:
This dictionary definition highlights that this is about an optimisation between familiarity and novelty. So you are having fun when the world is offering learning experiences, but not overloading you with new stuff. And you get bored when stuff is over-learned and lacks challenge.

I would say that boredom is more multidimensional matter that just learning. It plays a vital role in many developmental and survival challenges an animal faces.
 
Surely being bored is a problem that only fully conscious animals have. i.e only humans. Humans still haven't been able to explain and therefore satisfy their need to know the reason for their existence on this planet. Boredom came into play when we became conscious species.
 

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