In observational learning (OL), organisms learn from observing the behavior of others. There are at least two distinct strategies for OL. Imitation involves learning to repeat the previous actions of other agents, while in emulation, learning proceeds from inferring the goals and intentions of others. While putative neural correlates for these forms of learning have been identified, a fundamental question remains unaddressed: how does the brain decides which strategy to use in a given situation? Here we developed a novel computational model in which arbitration between the strategies is determined by the predictive reliability, such that control over behavior is adaptively weighted toward the strategy with the most reliable prediction. To t...
This is a systematic study on learning in the repeated game from the neuroeconomics perspective. The...
SummaryNeuroimaging studies have recently provided support for the existence of a human equivalent o...
Decision making often requires integrating self-gathered information with information acquired from ...
Humans and some animal species are able to learn stimulus-response (S-R) associations by observing o...
SummaryEvaluating the abilities of others is fundamental for successful economic and social behavior...
Interactions with conspecifics are key to any social species. In order to navigate this social world...
Evaluating the abilities of others is fundamental for successful economic and social behavior. We in...
While there is no doubt that social signals affect human reinforcement learning, there is still no c...
Evaluating the abilities of others is fundamental for successful economic and social behavior. We in...
A recent approach in social neuroscience has been the application of formal computational models for...
Learning what behaviour is appropriate in a specific context by observing the actions of others and ...
In inverse reinforcement learning an observer infers the reward distribution available for actions i...
When learning from direct experience, neurons in the primate brain have been shown to encode a teach...
Imitation is a process by which individuals learn to perform a behavior pattern as a result of obser...
Abstract—Neurophysiology revealed the existence of mirror neurons in brain of macaque monkeys and th...
This is a systematic study on learning in the repeated game from the neuroeconomics perspective. The...
SummaryNeuroimaging studies have recently provided support for the existence of a human equivalent o...
Decision making often requires integrating self-gathered information with information acquired from ...
Humans and some animal species are able to learn stimulus-response (S-R) associations by observing o...
SummaryEvaluating the abilities of others is fundamental for successful economic and social behavior...
Interactions with conspecifics are key to any social species. In order to navigate this social world...
Evaluating the abilities of others is fundamental for successful economic and social behavior. We in...
While there is no doubt that social signals affect human reinforcement learning, there is still no c...
Evaluating the abilities of others is fundamental for successful economic and social behavior. We in...
A recent approach in social neuroscience has been the application of formal computational models for...
Learning what behaviour is appropriate in a specific context by observing the actions of others and ...
In inverse reinforcement learning an observer infers the reward distribution available for actions i...
When learning from direct experience, neurons in the primate brain have been shown to encode a teach...
Imitation is a process by which individuals learn to perform a behavior pattern as a result of obser...
Abstract—Neurophysiology revealed the existence of mirror neurons in brain of macaque monkeys and th...
This is a systematic study on learning in the repeated game from the neuroeconomics perspective. The...
SummaryNeuroimaging studies have recently provided support for the existence of a human equivalent o...
Decision making often requires integrating self-gathered information with information acquired from ...