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Neural and computational underpinnings of biased confidence in human reinforcement learning

Psychology

Neural and computational underpinnings of biased confidence in human reinforcement learning

C. Ting, N. Salem-garcia, et al.

Explore the fascinating neural mechanisms behind biased confidence in human reinforcement learning! Delve into the groundbreaking research by Chih-Chung Ting, Nahuel Salem-Garcia, Stefano Palminteri, Jan B. Engelmann, and Maël Lebreton, which reveals how the VMPFC network encodes global confidence signals amidst contextual biases using fMRI technology.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
While navigating a fundamentally uncertain world, humans and animals constantly evaluate the probability of their decisions, actions or statements being correct. When explicitly elicited, these confidence estimates typically correlate positively with neural activity in a ventromedial-prefrontal (VMPFC) network and negatively in a dorsolateral and dorsomedial prefrontal network. Here, combining fMRI with a reinforcement-learning paradigm, we leverage the fact that humans are more confident in their choices when seeking gains than avoiding losses to reveal a functional dissociation: whereas the dorsal prefrontal network correlates negatively with a condition-specific confidence signal, the VMPFC network positively encodes task-wide confidence signal incorporating the valence-induced bias. Challenging dominant neuro-computational models, we found that decision-related VMPFC activity better correlates with confidence than with option-values inferred from reinforcement-learning models. Altogether, these results identify the VMPFC as a key node in the neuro-computational architecture that builds global feeling-of-confidence signals from latent decision variables and contextual biases during reinforcement-learning.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Oct 28, 2023
Authors
Chih-Chung Ting, Nahuel Salem-Garcia, Stefano Palminteri, Jan B. Engelmann, Maël Lebreton
Tags
reinforcement learning
confidence
VMPFC network
fMRI
decision making
neural mechanisms
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