Lecture 13 - Decision making (Cognitive Neuroscience, UU)

Utility: psychological value assigned to an outcome.

Prospect theory

  • Prospect: option whose future rewards and probabilities are known or can be estimated.
  • It is a descriptive theory: it describes what people will choose instead of should do.
  • It differs from the expected-utility theory in two ways:
    • Reference dependence: current state is a reference point
      • Reference point
      • Diminished sensitivity
      • Loss aversion
    • Probability weighting: subjective perception of probabilities
      • Possibility effect: a chance is better than no chance
      • Certainty effect: no risk is better than some risk

 

 

Primary reinforcer: rewards that have a direct benefit for fitness

Secondary reinforcer: neutral outcome that has been turned into a positive one

 

Substantial nigra and ventral tegmental area are the dopamine nuclei.

In rats, the dopaminergic system was removed, and the rats still liked certain tastes. This indicates wanting instead of liking: motivation to pursue a reward.

Nucleus accumbens: activated by wide range of motivationally relevant stimuli. Reinforcement of a desirable association.

DA neurons signal changes in information:

Reward prediction error (RPE): the actual outcome differs from what was expected.

Actor-critic models: the brain has 2 systems

  1. Critic: evaluation, are rewards better or worse than expected?  ventral striatum (RPE)
  2. Actor: updates values of potential courses of action  dorsal striatum

Damage to reward pathways:

  • Motor: Parkinson’s, Huntington’s
  • Psychiatric: schizophrenia, depression, ADHD

Pathological gamblers’ brains ‘learn’ from near-misses. Males 14-22 years old, prefrontal cortex not fully developed yet.

Salience can lead to dopaminergic increase.

Uncertainty: psychological state of having a lack of information.

Risk: decision has multiple potential outcomes with known probabilities

Brain regions risk taking:

[note: deze afbeelding uit het college is door de WorldSupporter redactie verwijderd wegens vermoedelijke inbreuk op het auteursrecht] 

Ambiguity: probabilities of the outcomes cannot be known. OFC and PFC are involved.

Dual system: two separate processes

  • Kahneman:

    • System 1: fast, parallel, automatic, context-dependent
    • System 2: slower, serial, controlled, evidence-based

Social stimuli are rewarding. How rewarding depends on the social relationship.

Two theories:

  1. Motivated by internal, reinforcing reward signals
  2. Required social cognition to recognize another individual’s needs

Parietal cortex: social cognition

mPFC: thinking about other people’s mental states

 

Game theory studies how decisions are made in complex situations.

  • Prisoner’s dilemma
  • Ultimatum game
  • Trust game

Altruistic punishment: censuring people who violate social norms.

Currency signal: neurons tracking subjective value, regardless of category.

Drift-diffusion models: assume that decision making is a random drift from neural states towards thresholds for action.

Modality-indepenent value signals: ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Insensitivity to negative feedback after damage.

Heuristics: rules that allow people to simplify complex decision situations into something more manageable. Why do we need heuristics?

  • Bounded rationality: organisms have finite computational resources
  • Decisions are often made under time constraints

Anchoring heuristic: tendency of reference points to bias subsequent value judgements

Endowment effect: people require more money when selling something they own than they are willing to pay when buying identical good

Questions? Let me know in the contribution section!

Follow me for more summaries / lecture notes!

Image

Access: 
Public

Image

Join WorldSupporter!
Search a summary

Image

 

 

Contributions: posts

Help other WorldSupporters with additions, improvements and tips

Add new contribution

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

Image

Spotlight: topics

Image

Check how to use summaries on WorldSupporter.org

Online access to all summaries, study notes en practice exams

How and why use WorldSupporter.org for your summaries and study assistance?

  • For free use of many of the summaries and study aids provided or collected by your fellow students.
  • For free use of many of the lecture and study group notes, exam questions and practice questions.
  • For use of all exclusive summaries and study assistance for those who are member with JoHo WorldSupporter with online access
  • For compiling your own materials and contributions with relevant study help
  • For sharing and finding relevant and interesting summaries, documents, notes, blogs, tips, videos, discussions, activities, recipes, side jobs and more.

Using and finding summaries, notes and practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter

There are several ways to navigate the large amount of summaries, study notes en practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter.

  1. Use the summaries home pages for your study or field of study
  2. Use the check and search pages for summaries and study aids by field of study, subject or faculty
  3. Use and follow your (study) organization
    • by using your own student organization as a starting point, and continuing to follow it, easily discover which study materials are relevant to you
    • this option is only available through partner organizations
  4. Check or follow authors or other WorldSupporters
  5. Use the menu above each page to go to the main theme pages for summaries
    • Theme pages can be found for international studies as well as Dutch studies

Do you want to share your summaries with JoHo WorldSupporter and its visitors?

Quicklinks to fields of study for summaries and study assistance

Main summaries home pages:

Main study fields:

Main study fields NL:

Follow the author: JuliaV
Work for WorldSupporter

Image

JoHo can really use your help!  Check out the various student jobs here that match your studies, improve your competencies, strengthen your CV and contribute to a more tolerant world

Working for JoHo as a student in Leyden

Parttime werken voor JoHo

Statistics
1707