Multiple neural mechanisms of decision making and their competition under changing risk pressure.

Sometimes when a choice is made, the outcome is not guaranteed and there is only a probability of its occurrence. Each individual's attitude to probability, sometimes called risk proneness or aversion, has been assumed to be static. Behavioral ecological studies, however, suggest such attitudes...

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Main Authors: Kolling, N, Wittmann, M, Rushworth, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Cell Press 2014
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author Kolling, N
Wittmann, M
Rushworth, M
author_facet Kolling, N
Wittmann, M
Rushworth, M
author_sort Kolling, N
collection OXFORD
description Sometimes when a choice is made, the outcome is not guaranteed and there is only a probability of its occurrence. Each individual's attitude to probability, sometimes called risk proneness or aversion, has been assumed to be static. Behavioral ecological studies, however, suggest such attitudes are dynamically modulated by the context an organism finds itself in; in some cases, it may be optimal to pursue actions with a low probability of success but which are associated with potentially large gains. We show that human subjects rapidly adapt their use of probability as a function of current resources, goals, and opportunities for further foraging. We demonstrate that dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) carries signals indexing the pressure to pursue unlikely choices and signals related to the taking of such choices. We show that dACC exerts this control over behavior when it, rather than ventromedial prefrontal cortex, interacts with posterior cingulate cortex.
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spelling oxford-uuid:a0a5aabf-9ee4-43df-ac78-9f8ede2dea852022-03-27T02:06:54ZMultiple neural mechanisms of decision making and their competition under changing risk pressure.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:a0a5aabf-9ee4-43df-ac78-9f8ede2dea85EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordCell Press2014Kolling, NWittmann, MRushworth, MSometimes when a choice is made, the outcome is not guaranteed and there is only a probability of its occurrence. Each individual's attitude to probability, sometimes called risk proneness or aversion, has been assumed to be static. Behavioral ecological studies, however, suggest such attitudes are dynamically modulated by the context an organism finds itself in; in some cases, it may be optimal to pursue actions with a low probability of success but which are associated with potentially large gains. We show that human subjects rapidly adapt their use of probability as a function of current resources, goals, and opportunities for further foraging. We demonstrate that dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) carries signals indexing the pressure to pursue unlikely choices and signals related to the taking of such choices. We show that dACC exerts this control over behavior when it, rather than ventromedial prefrontal cortex, interacts with posterior cingulate cortex.
spellingShingle Kolling, N
Wittmann, M
Rushworth, M
Multiple neural mechanisms of decision making and their competition under changing risk pressure.
title Multiple neural mechanisms of decision making and their competition under changing risk pressure.
title_full Multiple neural mechanisms of decision making and their competition under changing risk pressure.
title_fullStr Multiple neural mechanisms of decision making and their competition under changing risk pressure.
title_full_unstemmed Multiple neural mechanisms of decision making and their competition under changing risk pressure.
title_short Multiple neural mechanisms of decision making and their competition under changing risk pressure.
title_sort multiple neural mechanisms of decision making and their competition under changing risk pressure
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AT wittmannm multipleneuralmechanismsofdecisionmakingandtheircompetitionunderchangingriskpressure
AT rushworthm multipleneuralmechanismsofdecisionmakingandtheircompetitionunderchangingriskpressure