The vigor with which humans and animals engage in a task is often a determinant of the likelihood of the task’s success. An influential theoretical model suggests that the speed and rate at which responses are made should depend on the availability of rewards and punishments. While vigor facilitates the gathering of rewards in a bountiful environment, there is an incentive to slow down when punishments are forthcoming so as to decrease the rate of punishments, in conflict with the urge to perform fast to escape punishment. Previous experiments confirmed the former, leaving the latter unanswered. We tested the influence of punishment in an experiment involving economic incentives and contrasted this with reward related behavior on the same t...
We explored how reward and value of effort shapes performance in a sustained vigilance, reaction tim...
Do opportunities to punish non-punishers help to stabilize cooperation? Or do opportunities to punis...
There are two broad functional explanations for second-party punishment: fitness-leveling and deterr...
Two fundamental questions underlie the expression of behavior, namely what to do and how vigorously ...
Subjects routinely control the vigor with which they emit motoric responses. However, the bulk of fo...
From observation of human behavior, we know that speed of movement initiation and execution can be i...
Item does not contain fulltextRationale: We constantly need to decide not only which actions to perf...
Intuitively, most people assume that offering monetary rewards is a good way to motivate others to i...
When rewards are available, people expend more energy, increasing their motivational vigor. In theor...
Reinforcement learning models have long promised to unify computational, psychological and neural ac...
Reinforcement learning models have long promised to unify computational, psychological and neural ac...
In everyday life, we are constantly confronted to choice situations in which we need to decide wheth...
This data is related to the article 'Effects of reward and punishment on the interaction between goi...
RATIONALE: Dopamine neurotransmission has long been known to exert a powerful influence over the vig...
Dataset available at: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/24540Inhibition of no-longer relevant go responses...
We explored how reward and value of effort shapes performance in a sustained vigilance, reaction tim...
Do opportunities to punish non-punishers help to stabilize cooperation? Or do opportunities to punis...
There are two broad functional explanations for second-party punishment: fitness-leveling and deterr...
Two fundamental questions underlie the expression of behavior, namely what to do and how vigorously ...
Subjects routinely control the vigor with which they emit motoric responses. However, the bulk of fo...
From observation of human behavior, we know that speed of movement initiation and execution can be i...
Item does not contain fulltextRationale: We constantly need to decide not only which actions to perf...
Intuitively, most people assume that offering monetary rewards is a good way to motivate others to i...
When rewards are available, people expend more energy, increasing their motivational vigor. In theor...
Reinforcement learning models have long promised to unify computational, psychological and neural ac...
Reinforcement learning models have long promised to unify computational, psychological and neural ac...
In everyday life, we are constantly confronted to choice situations in which we need to decide wheth...
This data is related to the article 'Effects of reward and punishment on the interaction between goi...
RATIONALE: Dopamine neurotransmission has long been known to exert a powerful influence over the vig...
Dataset available at: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/24540Inhibition of no-longer relevant go responses...
We explored how reward and value of effort shapes performance in a sustained vigilance, reaction tim...
Do opportunities to punish non-punishers help to stabilize cooperation? Or do opportunities to punis...
There are two broad functional explanations for second-party punishment: fitness-leveling and deterr...