Costs (e.g. energetic expenditure) and benefits (e.g. food) are central determinants of behavior. In ecology and economics, they are combined to form a utility function which is maximized to guide choices. This principle is widely used in neuroscience as a normative model of decision and action, but current versions of this model fail to consider how decisions are actually converted into actions (i.e. the formation of trajectories). Here, we describe an approach where decision making and motor control are optimal, iterative processes derived from the maximization of the discounted, weighted difference between expected rewards and foreseeable motor efforts. The model accounts for decision making in cost/benefit situations, and detailed chara...
Expected utility models are often used as a normative baseline for human performance in motor tasks....
For decades now, normative theories of perceptual decisions, and their implementation as drift diffu...
addresses the question of what is the best or optimal choice for a given type of decision-making pro...
Each action our bodies execute is the consequence of a complex process of decision making by the bra...
Movements produced in everyday life pursue a goal. Key to the success of such movements is the motor...
An important aspect of cognitive flexibility is inhibitory control, the ability to dynamically modif...
Most approaches to understanding human motor control assume that people maximize their rewards while...
Animals are motivated to act so as to maximize their subjective reward rate, which depends on factor...
Intelligent agents are often faced with the need to choose actions with uncertain consequences, and ...
Contains fulltext : 203399.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Despite its imp...
This article reviews recently proposed theories postulating that, during simple choices, the brain p...
This article poses a controversial question: is optimal control theory useful for understanding moto...
SummarySpeed-accuracy trade-off is an intensively studied law governing almost all behavioral tasks ...
This article seeks to integrate two sets of theories describing action selection in the basal gangli...
Optimal feedback control theory (OFCT) has been very successful in explaining human motor coordinati...
Expected utility models are often used as a normative baseline for human performance in motor tasks....
For decades now, normative theories of perceptual decisions, and their implementation as drift diffu...
addresses the question of what is the best or optimal choice for a given type of decision-making pro...
Each action our bodies execute is the consequence of a complex process of decision making by the bra...
Movements produced in everyday life pursue a goal. Key to the success of such movements is the motor...
An important aspect of cognitive flexibility is inhibitory control, the ability to dynamically modif...
Most approaches to understanding human motor control assume that people maximize their rewards while...
Animals are motivated to act so as to maximize their subjective reward rate, which depends on factor...
Intelligent agents are often faced with the need to choose actions with uncertain consequences, and ...
Contains fulltext : 203399.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Despite its imp...
This article reviews recently proposed theories postulating that, during simple choices, the brain p...
This article poses a controversial question: is optimal control theory useful for understanding moto...
SummarySpeed-accuracy trade-off is an intensively studied law governing almost all behavioral tasks ...
This article seeks to integrate two sets of theories describing action selection in the basal gangli...
Optimal feedback control theory (OFCT) has been very successful in explaining human motor coordinati...
Expected utility models are often used as a normative baseline for human performance in motor tasks....
For decades now, normative theories of perceptual decisions, and their implementation as drift diffu...
addresses the question of what is the best or optimal choice for a given type of decision-making pro...