Neural signatures underlying deliberation in human foraging decisions

Humans have a remarkable capacity to mentally project themselves far ahead in time. This ability, which entails the mental simulation of events, is thought to be fundamental to deliberative decision making, as it allows us to search through and evaluate possible choices. Many decisions that humans m...

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Published inCognitive, affective, & behavioral neuroscience Vol. 19; no. 6; pp. 1492 - 1508
Main Authors Abram, Samantha V., Hanke, Michael, Redish, A. David, MacDonald, Angus W.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Springer US 01.12.2019
Springer Nature B.V
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ISSN1530-7026
1531-135X
1531-135X
DOI10.3758/s13415-019-00733-z

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Summary:Humans have a remarkable capacity to mentally project themselves far ahead in time. This ability, which entails the mental simulation of events, is thought to be fundamental to deliberative decision making, as it allows us to search through and evaluate possible choices. Many decisions that humans make are foraging decisions, in which one must decide whether an available offer is worth taking, when compared to unknown future possibilities (i.e., the background). Using a translational decision-making paradigm designed to reveal decision preferences in rats, we found that humans engaged in deliberation when making foraging decisions. A key feature of this task is that preferences (and thus, value) are revealed as a function of serial choices. Like rats, humans also took longer to respond when faced with difficult decisions near their preference boundary, which was associated with prefrontal and hippocampal activation, exemplifying cross-species parallels in deliberation. Furthermore, we found that voxels within the visual cortices encoded neural representations of the available possibilities specifically following regret-inducing experiences, in which the subject had previously rejected a good offer only to encounter a low-valued offer on the subsequent trial.
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S.V.A., A.D.R., and A.W.M. designed the experiment; A.D.R. and A.W.M. supervised the project; S.V.A. carried out the experiments and analyzed the data with assistance from M.H., A.D.R., and A.W.M.; S.V.A., M.H., A.D.R., and A.W.M. wrote the manuscript.
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ISSN:1530-7026
1531-135X
1531-135X
DOI:10.3758/s13415-019-00733-z