SummaryEconomists and cognitive psychologists have long known that prior rewards bias decision making in favor of options with high expected value. Accordingly, value modulates the activity of sensorimotor neurons involved in initiating movements toward one of two competing decision alternatives. However, little is known about how value influences the acquisition and representation of incoming sensory information or about the neural mechanisms that track the relative value of each available stimulus to guide behavior. Here, fMRI revealed value-related modulations throughout spatially selective areas of the human visual system in the absence of overt saccadic responses (including in V1). These modulations were primarily associated with the r...
AbstractReward outcome signalling in the sensory cortex is held as important for linking stimuli to ...
UNLABELLED: Integrating costs and benefits is crucial for optimal decision-making. Although much is ...
People are alarmingly susceptible to manipulations that change both their expectations and experienc...
SummaryEconomists and cognitive psychologists have long known that prior rewards bias decision makin...
Past reward associations may be signaled by stimuli from different sensory modalities, however it re...
SummaryThe subjective values of choice options can impact on behavior in two fundamentally different...
Past reward associations may be signaled from different sensory modalities; however, it remains uncl...
Standard neuroeconomics theories state that the value of different classes of stimuli, for instance ...
There is a growing consensus in behavioral neuroscience that the brain makes simple choices by first...
The frontal cortex is crucial to sound decision-making, and the activity of frontal neurons correlat...
Cognitive regulation is often used to influence behavioral outcomes. However, the computational and ...
When making choices under uncertainty, people usually consider both the expected value and risk of e...
When a behaviorally relevant stimulus has been previously associated with reward, behavioral respons...
Selective attention is the prioritisation of certain pieces of information over others, and is often...
We often make decisions not only based on an item’s value, but also the effort required to obtain it...
AbstractReward outcome signalling in the sensory cortex is held as important for linking stimuli to ...
UNLABELLED: Integrating costs and benefits is crucial for optimal decision-making. Although much is ...
People are alarmingly susceptible to manipulations that change both their expectations and experienc...
SummaryEconomists and cognitive psychologists have long known that prior rewards bias decision makin...
Past reward associations may be signaled by stimuli from different sensory modalities, however it re...
SummaryThe subjective values of choice options can impact on behavior in two fundamentally different...
Past reward associations may be signaled from different sensory modalities; however, it remains uncl...
Standard neuroeconomics theories state that the value of different classes of stimuli, for instance ...
There is a growing consensus in behavioral neuroscience that the brain makes simple choices by first...
The frontal cortex is crucial to sound decision-making, and the activity of frontal neurons correlat...
Cognitive regulation is often used to influence behavioral outcomes. However, the computational and ...
When making choices under uncertainty, people usually consider both the expected value and risk of e...
When a behaviorally relevant stimulus has been previously associated with reward, behavioral respons...
Selective attention is the prioritisation of certain pieces of information over others, and is often...
We often make decisions not only based on an item’s value, but also the effort required to obtain it...
AbstractReward outcome signalling in the sensory cortex is held as important for linking stimuli to ...
UNLABELLED: Integrating costs and benefits is crucial for optimal decision-making. Although much is ...
People are alarmingly susceptible to manipulations that change both their expectations and experienc...