Unlabelled: Natural environments are complex, and a single choice can lead to multiple outcomes. Agents should learn which outcomes are due to their choices and therefore relevant for future decisions and which are stochastic in ways common to all choices and therefore irrelevant for future decisions between options. We designed an experiment in which human participants learned the varying reward and effort magnitudes of two options and repeatedly chose between them. The reward associated with a choice was randomly real or hypothetical (i.e., participants only sometimes received the reward magnitude associated with the chosen option). The real/hypothetical nature of the reward on any one trial was, however, irrelevant for learning the longer-term values of the choices, and participants ought to have only focused on the informational content of the outcome and disregarded whether it was a real or hypothetical reward. However, we found that participants showed an irrational choice bias, preferring choices that had previously led, by chance, to a real reward in the last trial. Amygdala and ventromedial prefrontal activity was related to the way in which participants' choices were biased by real reward receipt. By contrast, activity in dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, frontal operculum/anterior insula, and especially lateral anterior prefrontal cortex was related to the degree to which participants resisted this bias and chose effectively in a manner guided by aspects of outcomes that had real and more sustained relationships with particular choices, suppressing irrelevant reward information for more optimal learning and decision making.
Significance Statement: In complex natural environments, a single choice can lead to multiple outcomes. Human agents should only learn from outcomes that are due to their choices, not from outcomes without such a relationship. We designed an experiment to measure learning about reward and effort magnitudes in an environment in which other features of the outcome were random and had no relationship with choice. We found that, although people could learn about reward magnitudes, they nevertheless were irrationally biased toward repeating certain choices as a function of the presence or absence of random reward features. Activity in different brain regions in the prefrontal cortex either reflected the bias or reflected resistance to the bias.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0396-15.2015 | DOI Listing |
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January 2025
Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at Virginia Tech Carilion, Roanoke, VA; Graduate Program in Translational Biology Medicine and Health, Blacksburg, VA; Department of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA.
Sugar sweetened-beverage (SSB) consumption contributes to poor diet quality and diet-related chronic diseases. One effective public health strategy to reduce SSB consumption is to tax SSB. Laboratory approaches can complement existing methods to improve understanding of how taxes on SSB influence purchasing.
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January 2025
Global Value and Real-World Evidence, Otsuka Pharmaceutical Development & Commercialization, Inc., Princeton, NJ.
Background: Bipolar disorder is a severe recurrent, episodic psychiatric condition with a worldwide prevalence of approximately 1%, affecting more than 5 million adults in the United States in 2020. A subtype, bipolar I disorder (BP-I), which accounts for approximately one-quarter of cases, is associated with impairments in psychosocial functioning and quality of life. Recommended treatment options include daily oral, or long-acting injectable, antipsychotics, including the aripiprazole once every month formulation, which has been shown to improve adherence compared with oral treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Manag Care Spec Pharm
January 2025
Global Value and Real-World Evidence, Otsuka Pharmaceutical Development & Commercialization, Inc., Princeton, NJ.
Background: Schizophrenia is a chronic psychiatric disorder, affecting 1.1% of the adult population in 2020 in the United States. Antipsychotic treatment is commonly used in schizophrenia management to help reduce the likelihood of symptom recurrence and relapse.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
December 2024
Homi Bhabha National Institute (HBNI), Mumbai, India.
In this study, a linked simulation optimization (SO) model is presented for identification of groundwater contaminant sources. The SO model consists of two steps namely, simulation and optimization. The simulation step entails developing a groundwater contaminant transport model in which the advection-dispersion-reaction equation (ADRE) is solved for predicting the concentration of the contaminant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Brain Funct
December 2024
School of Psychology, Northeast Normal University, 5268 Renmin Street, Changchun, 130024, Jilin, China.
Reward cues have long been considered to enhance creative performance; however, little is known about whether rewards can affect creative problem solving by manipulating states of flexibility and persistence. This study sought to elucidate the differential impacts of real versus hypothetical rewards on the creative process utilizing the Chinese compound remote association task. Behavioral analysis revealed a significantly enhanced solution rate and response times in scenarios involving real rewards, in contrast to those observed with hypothetical rewards.
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