Rats will work for electrical stimulation of the medial forebrain bundle. The rewarding effect arises from the volleys of action potentials fired by the stimulation and subsequent spatio-temporal integration of their post-synpatic impact. The proportion of time allocated to self-stimulation depends on the intensity of the rewarding effect as well as on other key determinants of decision-making, such as subjective opportunity costs and reward probability. We have proposed that a 3D model relating time allocation to the intensity and cost of reward can distinguish manipulations acting prior to the output of the spatio-temporal integrator from those acting at or beyond it. Here, we test this proposition by varying reward probability, a variabl...
The neurobiological study of reward was launched by the discovery of intracranial self-stimulation (...
Economic theories posit reward probability as one of the factors defining reward value. Individuals ...
Citation: Marshall, A. T., & Kirkpatrick, K. (2015). Relative Gains, Losses, and Reference Points in...
Time plays an essential role in reward valuation. While animals prefer large rewards to small reward...
Pursuit of one goal typically precludes simultaneous pursuit of another. Thus, each exclusive activi...
Brain stimulation reward (BSR), the effect of electrical stimulation that animals seek to reinitiate...
Animals will work vigorously for electrical stimulation delivered to the medial forebrain bundle. Th...
Pursuit of one goal typically precludes simultaneous pursuit of another. Thus, each exclusive activi...
The principal goal of psychophysics is to describe the functions that transform the objective variab...
This dissertation reports analyses of performance for rewarding brain stimu- lation in a three-part ...
Theoretical reference points have been proposed to differentiate probabilistic gains from probabilis...
The reward-mountain model relates the vigor of reward seeking to the strength and cost of reward. Ap...
Theoretical reference points have been proposed to differentiate probabilistic gains from probabilis...
Humans (as well as animals) have an inherent tendency to seek out rewards and to avoid punishments. ...
There has been a recent surge in the experimental investigation of the control of behavioral variabi...
The neurobiological study of reward was launched by the discovery of intracranial self-stimulation (...
Economic theories posit reward probability as one of the factors defining reward value. Individuals ...
Citation: Marshall, A. T., & Kirkpatrick, K. (2015). Relative Gains, Losses, and Reference Points in...
Time plays an essential role in reward valuation. While animals prefer large rewards to small reward...
Pursuit of one goal typically precludes simultaneous pursuit of another. Thus, each exclusive activi...
Brain stimulation reward (BSR), the effect of electrical stimulation that animals seek to reinitiate...
Animals will work vigorously for electrical stimulation delivered to the medial forebrain bundle. Th...
Pursuit of one goal typically precludes simultaneous pursuit of another. Thus, each exclusive activi...
The principal goal of psychophysics is to describe the functions that transform the objective variab...
This dissertation reports analyses of performance for rewarding brain stimu- lation in a three-part ...
Theoretical reference points have been proposed to differentiate probabilistic gains from probabilis...
The reward-mountain model relates the vigor of reward seeking to the strength and cost of reward. Ap...
Theoretical reference points have been proposed to differentiate probabilistic gains from probabilis...
Humans (as well as animals) have an inherent tendency to seek out rewards and to avoid punishments. ...
There has been a recent surge in the experimental investigation of the control of behavioral variabi...
The neurobiological study of reward was launched by the discovery of intracranial self-stimulation (...
Economic theories posit reward probability as one of the factors defining reward value. Individuals ...
Citation: Marshall, A. T., & Kirkpatrick, K. (2015). Relative Gains, Losses, and Reference Points in...