Decision-makers benefit from information only when they can use it to guide behavior. However, recent experiments found that pigeons and starlings value information that they cannot use. Here we show that this paradox is also present in rats, and explore the underlying decision process. Subjects chose between two options that delivered food probabilistically after a fixed delay. In one option (“info”), outcomes (food/no-food) were signaled immediately after choice, whereas in the alternative (“non-info”) the outcome was uncertain until the delay lapsed. Rats sacrificed up to 20% potential rewards by preferring the info option, but reversed preference when the cost was 60%. This reversal contrasts with the results found with pigeons and star...
Foraging animals typically encounter opportunities that they either pursue or skip, but occasionally...
Pigeons and other animals sometimes deviate from optimal choice behavior when given informative sign...
Foraging animals typically encounter opportunities that they either pursue or skip, but occasionally...
Decision-makers benefit from information only when they can use it to guide behavior. However, recen...
Signals that reduce uncertainty can be valuable because well-informed decision-makers can better ali...
Animals and humans face choices every day. Survival depends on whether the choices we make are adapt...
Humans and animals often make decisions not in their long-term best interest. In one example, called...
When offered a choice between 2 alternatives, animals sometimes prefer the option yielding less food...
Irrational decision making in humans and other species challenges the use of optimality in behaviour...
Identifying similarities and differences in choice behavior across species is informative about how ...
Several studies have shown that, when offered a choice between an option followed by stimuli indicat...
We simulate two types of environments to investigate how closely rats approximate optimal foraging. ...
Several studies in pigeons and rats have reported a predictable relation between latencies during ...
Animals, including humans, consistently exhibit myopia in two different contexts: foraging, in which...
Unlike what had been previously demonstrated with pigeons, rats chose stimuli that did not provide i...
Foraging animals typically encounter opportunities that they either pursue or skip, but occasionally...
Pigeons and other animals sometimes deviate from optimal choice behavior when given informative sign...
Foraging animals typically encounter opportunities that they either pursue or skip, but occasionally...
Decision-makers benefit from information only when they can use it to guide behavior. However, recen...
Signals that reduce uncertainty can be valuable because well-informed decision-makers can better ali...
Animals and humans face choices every day. Survival depends on whether the choices we make are adapt...
Humans and animals often make decisions not in their long-term best interest. In one example, called...
When offered a choice between 2 alternatives, animals sometimes prefer the option yielding less food...
Irrational decision making in humans and other species challenges the use of optimality in behaviour...
Identifying similarities and differences in choice behavior across species is informative about how ...
Several studies have shown that, when offered a choice between an option followed by stimuli indicat...
We simulate two types of environments to investigate how closely rats approximate optimal foraging. ...
Several studies in pigeons and rats have reported a predictable relation between latencies during ...
Animals, including humans, consistently exhibit myopia in two different contexts: foraging, in which...
Unlike what had been previously demonstrated with pigeons, rats chose stimuli that did not provide i...
Foraging animals typically encounter opportunities that they either pursue or skip, but occasionally...
Pigeons and other animals sometimes deviate from optimal choice behavior when given informative sign...
Foraging animals typically encounter opportunities that they either pursue or skip, but occasionally...