SummaryHow the brain uses success and failure to optimize future decisions is a long-standing question in neuroscience. One computational solution involves updating the values of context-action associations in proportion to a reward prediction error. Previous evidence suggests that such computations are expressed in the striatum and, as they are cognitively impenetrable, represent an unconscious learning mechanism. Here, we formally test this by studying instrumental conditioning in a situation where we masked contextual cues, such that they were not consciously perceived. Behavioral data showed that subjects nonetheless developed a significant propensity to choose cues associated with monetary rewards relative to punishments. Functional ne...
Learning occurs when an outcome deviates from expectation (prediction error). According to formal le...
Decision-making invokes two fundamental axes of control: affect or valence, spanning reward and puni...
Humans often accept the status quo when faced with conflicting choice alternatives. However, it is u...
Goal-directed and instrumental learning are both important controllers of human behavior. Learning a...
The computational framework of reinforcement learning has been used to forward our understanding of ...
Decisions must be implemented through actions, and actions are prone to error. As such, when an expe...
SummaryThe ability to learn not only from experienced but also from merely fictive outcomes without ...
Reinforcement learning theory has generated substantial interest in neurobiology, particularly becau...
AbstractDecision-making invokes two fundamental axes of control: affect or valence, spanning reward ...
International audienceWhether maximizing rewards and minimizing punishments rely on distinct brain s...
Decision-making invokes two fundamental axes of control: affect or valence, spanning reward and puni...
Substantial evidence indicates that subjective value is adapted to the statistics of reward expected...
Making sequential decisions to harvest rewards is a notoriously difficult problem. One difficulty is...
SummaryWhen an organism receives a reward, it is crucial to know which of many candidate actions cau...
To decide optimally between available options, organisms need to learn the values associated with th...
Learning occurs when an outcome deviates from expectation (prediction error). According to formal le...
Decision-making invokes two fundamental axes of control: affect or valence, spanning reward and puni...
Humans often accept the status quo when faced with conflicting choice alternatives. However, it is u...
Goal-directed and instrumental learning are both important controllers of human behavior. Learning a...
The computational framework of reinforcement learning has been used to forward our understanding of ...
Decisions must be implemented through actions, and actions are prone to error. As such, when an expe...
SummaryThe ability to learn not only from experienced but also from merely fictive outcomes without ...
Reinforcement learning theory has generated substantial interest in neurobiology, particularly becau...
AbstractDecision-making invokes two fundamental axes of control: affect or valence, spanning reward ...
International audienceWhether maximizing rewards and minimizing punishments rely on distinct brain s...
Decision-making invokes two fundamental axes of control: affect or valence, spanning reward and puni...
Substantial evidence indicates that subjective value is adapted to the statistics of reward expected...
Making sequential decisions to harvest rewards is a notoriously difficult problem. One difficulty is...
SummaryWhen an organism receives a reward, it is crucial to know which of many candidate actions cau...
To decide optimally between available options, organisms need to learn the values associated with th...
Learning occurs when an outcome deviates from expectation (prediction error). According to formal le...
Decision-making invokes two fundamental axes of control: affect or valence, spanning reward and puni...
Humans often accept the status quo when faced with conflicting choice alternatives. However, it is u...