keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36639891/undermatching-is-a-consequence-of-policy-compression
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bilal A Bari, Samuel J Gershman
The matching law describes the tendency of agents to match the ratio of choices allocated to the ratio of rewards received when choosing among multiple options (Herrnstein, 1961). Perfect matching, however, is infrequently observed. Instead, agents tend to undermatch, or bias choices towards the poorer option. Overmatching, or the tendency to bias choices towards the richer option, is rarely observed. Despite the ubiquity of undermatching, it has received an inadequate normative justification. Here, we assume agents not only seek to maximize reward, but also seek to minimize cognitive cost, which we formalize as policy complexity (the mutual information between actions and states of the environment)...
December 5, 2022: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36610586/the-molecular-memory-code-and-synaptic-plasticity-a-synthesis
#22
REVIEW
Samuel J Gershman
The most widely accepted view of memory in the brain holds that synapses are the storage sites of memory, and that memories are formed through associative modification of synapses. This view has been challenged on conceptual and empirical grounds. As an alternative, it has been proposed that molecules within the cell body are the storage sites of memory, and that memories are formed through biochemical operations on these molecules. This paper proposes a synthesis of these two views, grounded in a computational model of memory...
January 4, 2023: Bio Systems
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36554196/compositional-sequence-generation-in-the-entorhinal-hippocampal-system
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel C McNamee, Kimberly L Stachenfeld, Matthew M Botvinick, Samuel J Gershman
Neurons in the medial entorhinal cortex exhibit multiple, periodically organized, firing fields which collectively appear to form an internal representation of space. Neuroimaging data suggest that this grid coding is also present in other cortical areas such as the prefrontal cortex, indicating that it may be a general principle of neural functionality in the brain. In a recent analysis through the lens of dynamical systems theory, we showed how grid coding can lead to the generation of a diversity of empirically observed sequential reactivations of hippocampal place cells corresponding to traversals of cognitive maps...
December 8, 2022: Entropy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36456546/visual-motion-perception-as-online-hierarchical-inference
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Johannes Bill, Samuel J Gershman, Jan Drugowitsch
Identifying the structure of motion relations in the environment is critical for navigation, tracking, prediction, and pursuit. Yet, little is known about the mental and neural computations that allow the visual system to infer this structure online from a volatile stream of visual information. We propose online hierarchical Bayesian inference as a principled solution for how the brain might solve this complex perceptual task. We derive an online Expectation-Maximization algorithm that explains human percepts qualitatively and quantitatively for a diverse set of stimuli, covering classical psychophysics experiments, ambiguous motion scenes, and illusory motion displays...
December 1, 2022: Nature Communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36222637/dopamine-mediates-the-bidirectional-update-of-interval-timing
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anthony M V Jakob, John G Mikhael, Allison E Hamilos, John A Assad, Samuel J Gershman
The role of dopamine (DA) as a reward prediction error (RPE) signal in reinforcement learning (RL) tasks has been well-established over the past decades. Recent work has shown that the RPE interpretation can also account for the effects of DA on interval timing by controlling the speed of subjective time. According to this theory, the timing of the dopamine signal relative to reward delivery dictates whether subjective time speeds up or slows down: Early DA signals speed up subjective time and late signals slow it down...
October 2022: Behavioral Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36192493/trait-somatic-anxiety-is-associated-with-reduced-directed-exploration-and-underestimation-of-uncertainty
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Haoxue Fan, Samuel J Gershman, Elizabeth A Phelps
Anxiety has been related to decreased physical exploration, but past findings on the interaction between anxiety and exploration during decision making were inconclusive. Here we examined how latent factors of trait anxiety relate to different exploration strategies when facing volatility-induced uncertainty. Across two studies (total Nā€‰=ā€‰985), we demonstrated that people used a hybrid of directed, random and undirected exploration strategies, which were respectively sensitive to relative uncertainty, total uncertainty and value difference...
October 3, 2022: Nature Human Behaviour
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36168079/mental-control-of-uncertainty
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samuel J Gershman, Taylor Burke
Can you reduce uncertainty by thinking? Intuition suggests that this happens through the elusive process of attention: if we expend mental effort, we can increase the reliability of our sensory data. Models based on "rational inattention" formalize this idea in terms of a trade-off between the costs and benefits of attention. This paper surveys the origin of these models in economics, their connection to rate-distortion theory, and some of their recent applications to psychology and neuroscience. We also report new data from a numerosity judgment task in which we manipulate performance incentives...
September 27, 2022: Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36152355/inductive-biases-in-theory-based-reinforcement-learning
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas Pouncy, Samuel J Gershman
Understanding the inductive biases that allow humans to learn in complex environments has been an important goal of cognitive science. Yet, while we have discovered much about human biases in specific learning domains, much of this research has focused on simple tasks that lack the complexity of the real world. In contrast, video games involving agents and objects embedded in richly structured systems provide an experimentally tractable proxy for real-world complexity. Recent work has suggested that key aspects of human learning in domains like video games can be captured by model-based reinforcement learning (RL) with object-oriented relational models-what we term theory-based RL...
September 21, 2022: Cognitive Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35114098/the-role-of-state-uncertainty-in-the-dynamics-of-dopamine
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John G Mikhael, HyungGoo R Kim, Naoshige Uchida, Samuel J Gershman
Reinforcement learning models of the basal ganglia map the phasic dopamine signal to reward prediction errors (RPEs). Conventional models assert that, when a stimulus predicts a reward with fixed delay, dopamine activity during the delay should converge to baseline through learning. However, recent studies have found that dopamine ramps up before reward in certain conditions even after learning, thus challenging the conventional models. In this work, we show that sensory feedback causes an unbiased learner to produce RPE ramps...
January 28, 2022: Current Biology: CB
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34990160/heuristics-from-bounded-meta-learned-inference
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marcel Binz, Samuel J Gershman, Eric Schulz, Dominik Endres
Numerous researchers have put forward heuristics as models of human decision-making. However, where such heuristics come from is still a topic of ongoing debate. In this work, we propose a novel computational model that advances our understanding of heuristic decision-making by explaining how different heuristics are discovered and how they are selected. This model-called bounded meta-learned inference (BMI)-is based on the idea that people make environment-specific inferences about which strategies to use while being efficient in terms of how they use computational resources...
January 6, 2022: Psychological Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34912199/corrigendum-gradual-extinction-prevents-the-return-of-fear-implications-for-the-discovery-of-state
#31
Samuel J Gershman, Carolyn E Jones, Kenneth A Norman, Marie-H Monfils, Yael Niv
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2013.00164.].
2021: Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34487974/moral-dynamics-grounding-moral-judgment-in-intuitive-physics-and-intuitive-psychology
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Felix A Sosa, Tomer Ullman, Joshua B Tenenbaum, Samuel J Gershman, Tobias Gerstenberg
When holding others morally responsible, we care about what they did, and what they thought. Traditionally, research in moral psychology has relied on vignette studies, in which a protagonist's actions and thoughts are explicitly communicated. While this research has revealed what variables are important for moral judgment, such as actions and intentions, it is limited in providing a more detailed understanding of exactly how these variables affect moral judgment. Using dynamic visual stimuli that allow for a more fine-grained experimental control, recent studies have proposed a direct mapping from visual features to moral judgments...
September 3, 2021: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34376813/impulsivity-and-risk-seeking-as-bayesian-inference-under-dopaminergic-control
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John G Mikhael, Samuel J Gershman
Bayesian models successfully account for several of dopamine (DA)'s effects on contextual calibration in interval timing and reward estimation. In these models, tonic levels of DA control the precision of stimulus encoding, which is weighed against contextual information when making decisions. When DA levels are high, the animal relies more heavily on the (highly precise) stimulus encoding, whereas when DA levels are low, the context affects decisions more strongly. Here, we extend this idea to intertemporal choice and probability discounting tasks...
August 10, 2021: Neuropsychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34244363/causal-inference-gates-corticostriatal-learning
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hayley M Dorfman, Momchil Tomov, Bernice Cheung, Dennis Clarke, Samuel J Gershman, Brent L Hughes
Attributing outcomes to your own actions or to external causes is essential for appropriately learning which actions lead to reward and which actions do not. Our previous work showed that this type of credit assignment is best explained by a Bayesian reinforcement learning model which posits that beliefs about the causal structure of the environment modulate reward prediction errors (RPEs) during action value updating. In this study, we investigated the brain networks underlying reinforcement learning that are influenced by causal beliefs using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while human participants (n = 31; 13 males, 18 females) completed a behavioral task that manipulated beliefs about causal structure...
July 9, 2021: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34118191/just-looking-the-innocent-eye-in-neuroscience
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samuel J Gershman
Since the early days of neuroscience, students have been instructed to "just look" at their data with innocent eyes, and more recently with innocent algorithms. I argue that this epistemic attitude obscures the ubiquitous role that theory plays in neuroscience.
June 3, 2021: Neuron
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33890239/confidence-and-central-tendency-in-perceptual-judgment
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yang Xiang, Thomas Graeber, Benjamin Enke, Samuel J Gershman
This paper theoretically and empirically investigates the role of noisy cognition in perceptual judgment, focusing on the central tendency effect: the well-known empirical regularity that perceptual judgments are biased towards the center of the stimulus distribution. Based on a formal Bayesian framework, we generate predictions about the relationships between subjective confidence, central tendency, and response variability. Specifically, our model clarifies that lower subjective confidence as a measure of posterior uncertainty about a judgment should predict (i) a lower sensitivity of magnitude estimates to objective stimuli; (ii) a higher sensitivity to the mean of the stimulus distribution; (iii) a stronger central tendency effect at higher stimulus magnitudes; and (iv) higher response variability...
April 22, 2021: Attention, Perception & Psychophysics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33846626/flexible-modulation-of-sequence-generation-in-the-entorhinal-hippocampal-system
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel C McNamee, Kimberly L Stachenfeld, Matthew M Botvinick, Samuel J Gershman
Exploration, consolidation and planning depend on the generation of sequential state representations. However, these algorithms require disparate forms of sampling dynamics for optimal performance. We theorize how the brain should adapt internally generated sequences for particular cognitive functions and propose a neural mechanism by which this may be accomplished within the entorhinal-hippocampal circuit. Specifically, we demonstrate that the systematic modulation along the medial entorhinal cortex dorsoventral axis of grid population input into the hippocampus facilitates a flexible generative process that can interpolate between qualitatively distinct regimes of sequential hippocampal reactivations...
April 12, 2021: Nature Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33760806/rational-inattention-and-tonic-dopamine
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John G Mikhael, Lucy Lai, Samuel J Gershman
Slow-timescale (tonic) changes in dopamine (DA) contribute to a wide variety of processes in reinforcement learning, interval timing, and other domains. Furthermore, changes in tonic DA exert distinct effects depending on when they occur (e.g., during learning vs. performance) and what task the subject is performing (e.g., operant vs. classical conditioning). Two influential theories of tonic DA-the average reward theory and the Bayesian theory in which DA controls precision-have each been successful at explaining a subset of empirical findings...
March 2021: PLoS Computational Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33580096/human-visual-motion-perception-shows-hallmarks-of-bayesian-structural-inference
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sichao Yang, Johannes Bill, Jan Drugowitsch, Samuel J Gershman
Motion relations in visual scenes carry an abundance of behaviorally relevant information, but little is known about how humans identify the structure underlying a scene's motion in the first place. We studied the computations governing human motion structure identification in two psychophysics experiments and found that perception of motion relations showed hallmarks of Bayesian structural inference. At the heart of our research lies a tractable task design that enabled us to reveal the signatures of probabilistic reasoning about latent structure...
February 12, 2021: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33566831/neural-signatures-of-arbitration-between-pavlovian-and-instrumental-action-selection
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samuel J Gershman, Marc Guitart-Masip, James F Cavanagh
Pavlovian associations drive approach towards reward-predictive cues, and avoidance of punishment-predictive cues. These associations "misbehave" when they conflict with correct instrumental behavior. This raises the question of how Pavlovian and instrumental influences on behavior are arbitrated. We test a computational theory according to which Pavlovian influence will be stronger when inferred controllability of outcomes is low. Using a model-based analysis of a Go/NoGo task with human subjects, we show that theta-band oscillatory power in frontal cortex tracks inferred controllability, and that these inferences predict Pavlovian action biases...
February 2021: PLoS Computational Biology
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