What is the definition for decision making?
“a decision is a deliberative process that results in the commitment to a categorical proposition”
Can categorical ‘sorting’ be done without cognitive processing?
yes, e.g when deciding on sensory input
‘did i hear p or d?’
Why is the signal detection theory useful and what is a typical experiment?
useful to quantify perceptual decisions in humans
Experiment:
subjects have to decide if a color is red or blue (its slightly varying)
sensations of colors are distributed on overlapping Gaussians —> overlapping part hard to distinguish —> can be incorrect answer
ideal observer —> ratio of false positives and false negatives would be 1:1
this ratio can change based on rewards and penalities (You get money if you correctly identify blue —> more false positives. You get money if you correctly identify red —> more false negatives)
What is the categorical perception?
classification of sounds as phonemes
—> adults usually have prototype phoneme
—> sounds will be compared to prototypes and the most likely one is the vocale we decide on
Can any person learn new languages equally well?
person from area with phoneme rich language can more easily learn new languages (easier to distinguish)
What is a typical experiment for perceptual decisions?
often studied with visual tasks
monkey has to keep fixation
more dots to one random dot in specific direction
—> animal has to decide for direction —> reward
What are the 2 models for individual cell responses in decision areas?
neurons encode decisions by their spike rate
—> find right spike-rate during decision-making process
Ramping Model: individual spike rates drift from baseline to upper or lower bound
Step Model: individual cells make single activity step to upper or lower bound
What is the homo oeconomicus?
a theroretical person
always makes same rational decisions
maximizes utility
has absolute preferences, never changing (of e.g comparison)
What is the difference between Homo oeconomicus and Homo sapiens
Homo sapiens has relative preferences
confused by uncertainty and risk
shows framing effect and endowment effect
has difficulty to assess value in future
Homo oeconomicus has absolute perferences
never changing, regardless of comparison
always makes same rational decision
What is the behavior of Homo sapiens when facing risk?
Confronted with gains:
Fear of disappointment
when confronted with moderate chance of success —> risk averse
Hope of large gain
when small chance of success —> risk seeking
Confronted with losses:
Hope to avoid loss
when confronted with small chance of not losing —> risk seeking
Fear of large loss
when small chance of losing —> risk averse
What is the behavior of Homo sapiens of framing?
framing = putting a decision into specific context
people can be manipulated into picking specific option
if you ask a way that stresses potential gains —> risk avers
if you stress losses —> risk seeking
—> often used in real life (commercials)
What is the behavior of Homo sapiens of the Endowment effect?
—> people demand higher price to sell an object, than willing to pay for same object
possession of objects increases its value for owner
What is the behavior of Homo sapiens of Reward discounting?
rewards that occur in future have risk of not being collected
—> value discounted
humans prefer immeditate reward vs better options with delayed reward
What is the attribution effect?
humans see own behavior as logically explained in situation
behavior of others explained by their character
What are the two decisional choice behavior systems?
Intuitive
fast
works at non-conscious, intuitive level
uses parallel processing
independent of intelligence and attention
everyday decisions
Rational
slow
works at conscious, explicit level
uses sequential processing
depends on intelligence and attention
complex decisions
What brain areas are involved in all decisions, regardless of the delay?
Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
Ventrolateral orbitofrontal cortex
Lateral orbitofrontal cortex
Intraparietal cortex
Supplementary motor area
Presupplemantry motor area
What brain areas are more involved in fast decisions?
medial regions
medial prefrontal cortex
medial orbitofrontal cortex
ventral striatum
left posterior hippocampus
In Homo sapiens and Homo oeconomicus, which areas are active in decision making?
Homo sapiens —> medial areas
Homo oeconomicus —> lateral areas
What brain area is important for suppressing fast (irrational) decisions?
lateral prefrontal cortex
Which brain areas are associated with risk-seeking and risk-avoiding behaviors?
risk-seeking
ventral striatum (nucleus accumbens)
ventromedial prefrontal cortex
—> represent reward value of stimulus
risk-avoiding
amygdala
anterior insula
What is the axiom of revealed preferences?
subjects select one of two options —> revealing their subjective values
experimentally: offering money
orbitofrontal cortex (OC) receives input from all sensory modalities
amygdala receives sensory input and projects to OC
OC projects widely throughout the brain
Which processes need to be completed to come to a cognitive dicision in a complex situation?
values into goals (internal or external)
goals into plans
plans into behavior and action
Describe Values to goals.
internal or external
Goal: get nutrients
internal value: get a sugary, fatty meal
external value: those are bad calories
Brain activity:
internal: ventromedial prefrontal cortex
external: hippocampus, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
Describe Goals into plans.
goals need to be translated into plans / strategies to come up with necessary steps to be taken
Brain region: dorsomedial prefrontal areas
Describe Plans into actions
information from sensory associated areas —> lateral prefrontal areas
activate supplementary motor cortex —> movements
What is the trolley problem?
moral problem:
do nothing and 5 people are killed
flip switch and 1 person is killed (but you have done the action that led to death)
—> how humans switch their strategy in deciding to make difficult moral decisions
decision based on emotional cues —> stronger in medial wall areas, amygdala, striatum
decision based on external cues —> lateral areas of cortex
How are these brain regions involved in decision-making?
Dorsomedial prefrontal cortex
Frontopolar cortex
Medial orbitofrontal cortex
—> frame options of losses or gains
—> determine how well options map onto our long-term goals, specified by ourselves (medial) or external circumstances (lateral)
—> assign values to option based on internal needs (hunger, thirst, …)
—> assign values to options based on external context
A “quick and dirty” and (therefore partly wrong) rule:
- - lateral areas are active in rational, external-rule-
based decisions
- medial areas are active in quick, internal-state-
driven, emotional decisions
In signal detection theory, what would be the ratio of false negative vs. false positive decisions of an ideal observer ?
1:1 —> unbiased
Which part of the frontal lobe is not considered part of the prefrontal cortex?
primary motor cortex
Which cortical area brings together external information and internal states and thus assigns the subjective value for a given situation
Orbitofrontal cortex
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