Pigeons and other animals sometimes deviate from optimal choice behavior when given informative signals for delayed outcomes. For example, when pigeons are given a choice between an alternative that always leads to food after a delay and an alternative that leads to food only half of the time after a delay, preference changes dramatically depending on whether the stimuli during the delays are correlated with (signal) the outcomes or not. With signaled outcomes, pigeons show a much greater preference for the suboptimal alternative than with unsignaled outcomes. Key variables and research findings related to this phenomenon are reviewed, including the effects of durations of the choice and delay periods, probability of reinforcement, and gaps...
Parallel experiments with rats and pigeons examined reasons for previous findings that in choices wi...
Both humans and non-human animals regularly encounter decisions involving risk and uncertainty. This...
Both human and non-human animals regularly need to make choices where the outcomes of their actions ...
Several studies have shown that, when offered a choice between an option followed by stimuli indicat...
In the natural environment, when an animal encounters a stimulus that signals the absence of food-a ...
When offered a choice between 2 alternatives, animals sometimes prefer the option yielding less food...
Pigeons have shown suboptimal gambling-like behavior when preferring a stimulus that infrequently si...
Humans and animals often make decisions not in their long-term best interest. In one example, called...
Signals that reduce uncertainty can be valuable because well-informed decision-makers can better ali...
Decision-makers benefit from information only when they can use it to guide behavior. However, recen...
When making risky decisions, people and pigeons often show similar choice patterns. When people lear...
When faced with delayed, uncertain rewards, humans and other animals usually prefer to know the even...
Individuals often face choices that have uncertain outcomes and have important consequences. As a mo...
Pigeon and human subjects were given repeated choices between variable and adjusting delays to token...
In a baseline condition, pigeons chose between an alternative that always provided food following a ...
Parallel experiments with rats and pigeons examined reasons for previous findings that in choices wi...
Both humans and non-human animals regularly encounter decisions involving risk and uncertainty. This...
Both human and non-human animals regularly need to make choices where the outcomes of their actions ...
Several studies have shown that, when offered a choice between an option followed by stimuli indicat...
In the natural environment, when an animal encounters a stimulus that signals the absence of food-a ...
When offered a choice between 2 alternatives, animals sometimes prefer the option yielding less food...
Pigeons have shown suboptimal gambling-like behavior when preferring a stimulus that infrequently si...
Humans and animals often make decisions not in their long-term best interest. In one example, called...
Signals that reduce uncertainty can be valuable because well-informed decision-makers can better ali...
Decision-makers benefit from information only when they can use it to guide behavior. However, recen...
When making risky decisions, people and pigeons often show similar choice patterns. When people lear...
When faced with delayed, uncertain rewards, humans and other animals usually prefer to know the even...
Individuals often face choices that have uncertain outcomes and have important consequences. As a mo...
Pigeon and human subjects were given repeated choices between variable and adjusting delays to token...
In a baseline condition, pigeons chose between an alternative that always provided food following a ...
Parallel experiments with rats and pigeons examined reasons for previous findings that in choices wi...
Both humans and non-human animals regularly encounter decisions involving risk and uncertainty. This...
Both human and non-human animals regularly need to make choices where the outcomes of their actions ...