Preference for the nearer of otherwise equivalent navigational goals quantifies behavioral motivation and natural selection.

Navigation and environmental perception precede most actions in mobile organisms. Navigation is based upon the fundamental assumption of a ubiquitous Preference for the Nearest of otherwise equivalent navigational goals (PfN). However, the magnitude and triggers for PfN are unknown and there is no c...

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Main Author: Russell E Jackson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3552966?pdf=render
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author Russell E Jackson
author_facet Russell E Jackson
author_sort Russell E Jackson
collection DOAJ
description Navigation and environmental perception precede most actions in mobile organisms. Navigation is based upon the fundamental assumption of a ubiquitous Preference for the Nearest of otherwise equivalent navigational goals (PfN). However, the magnitude and triggers for PfN are unknown and there is no clear evidence that PfN exists. I tested for PfN in human participants on a retrieval task. Results of these experiments provide the first evidence for PfN. Further, these data quantify the three primary PfN triggers and provide an experimental structure for using PfN as a behavioral metric across domains. Surprisingly, PfN exists at a high, but not universal, magnitude. Further, PfN derives most from the absolute distance to the farthest of multiple goals (d(f)), with little influence of the distance to the nearest goal (d(n)). These data provide previously unavailable quantification of behavioral motivation across species and may provide a measurable index of selection. These methods hold particular import for behavioral modification because proximity is a powerful determinant of decision outcomes across most behaviors.
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spelling doaj.art-534475ac3c1347598ed60e161ca2d4962022-12-21T20:32:33ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0181e5472510.1371/journal.pone.0054725Preference for the nearer of otherwise equivalent navigational goals quantifies behavioral motivation and natural selection.Russell E JacksonNavigation and environmental perception precede most actions in mobile organisms. Navigation is based upon the fundamental assumption of a ubiquitous Preference for the Nearest of otherwise equivalent navigational goals (PfN). However, the magnitude and triggers for PfN are unknown and there is no clear evidence that PfN exists. I tested for PfN in human participants on a retrieval task. Results of these experiments provide the first evidence for PfN. Further, these data quantify the three primary PfN triggers and provide an experimental structure for using PfN as a behavioral metric across domains. Surprisingly, PfN exists at a high, but not universal, magnitude. Further, PfN derives most from the absolute distance to the farthest of multiple goals (d(f)), with little influence of the distance to the nearest goal (d(n)). These data provide previously unavailable quantification of behavioral motivation across species and may provide a measurable index of selection. These methods hold particular import for behavioral modification because proximity is a powerful determinant of decision outcomes across most behaviors.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3552966?pdf=render
spellingShingle Russell E Jackson
Preference for the nearer of otherwise equivalent navigational goals quantifies behavioral motivation and natural selection.
PLoS ONE
title Preference for the nearer of otherwise equivalent navigational goals quantifies behavioral motivation and natural selection.
title_full Preference for the nearer of otherwise equivalent navigational goals quantifies behavioral motivation and natural selection.
title_fullStr Preference for the nearer of otherwise equivalent navigational goals quantifies behavioral motivation and natural selection.
title_full_unstemmed Preference for the nearer of otherwise equivalent navigational goals quantifies behavioral motivation and natural selection.
title_short Preference for the nearer of otherwise equivalent navigational goals quantifies behavioral motivation and natural selection.
title_sort preference for the nearer of otherwise equivalent navigational goals quantifies behavioral motivation and natural selection
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3552966?pdf=render
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