Department of Psychology, Koç University Istanbul, Turkey.
Front Integr Neurosci. 2011 Sep 27;5:56. doi: 10.3389/fnint.2011.00056. eCollection 2011.
Time is an essential feature of most decisions, because the reward earned from decisions frequently depends on the temporal statistics of the environment (e.g., on whether decisions must be made under deadlines). Accordingly, evolution appears to have favored a mechanism that predicts intervals in the seconds to minutes range with high accuracy on average, but significant variability from trial to trial. Importantly, the subjective sense of time that results is sufficiently imprecise that maximizing rewards in decision-making can require substantial behavioral adjustments (e.g., accumulating less evidence for a decision in order to beat a deadline). Reward maximization in many daily decisions therefore requires optimal temporal risk assessment. Here, we review the temporal decision-making literature, conduct secondary analyses of relevant published datasets, and analyze the results of a new experiment. The paper is organized in three parts. In the first part, we review literature and analyze existing data suggesting that animals take account of their inherent behavioral variability (their "endogenous timing uncertainty") in temporal decision-making. In the second part, we review literature that quantitatively demonstrates nearly optimal temporal risk assessment with sub-second and supra-second intervals using perceptual tasks (with humans and mice) and motor timing tasks (with humans). We supplement this section with original research that tested human and rat performance on a task that requires finding the optimal balance between two time-dependent quantities for reward maximization. This optimal balance in turn depends on the level of timing uncertainty. Corroborating the reviewed literature, humans and rats exhibited nearly optimal temporal risk assessment in this task. In the third section, we discuss the role of timing uncertainty in reward maximization in two-choice perceptual decision-making tasks and review literature that implicates timing uncertainty as an important factor in performance quality. Together, these studies strongly support the hypothesis that animals take normative account of their endogenous timing uncertainty. By incorporating the psychophysics of interval timing into the study of reward maximization, our approach bridges empirical and theoretical gaps between the interval timing and decision-making literatures.
时间是大多数决策的一个重要特征,因为决策所获得的奖励通常取决于环境的时间统计信息(例如,决策是否必须在截止日期之前做出)。因此,进化似乎倾向于一种机制,这种机制可以平均以高精度预测秒到分钟范围内的间隔,但每次试验都有很大的可变性。重要的是,由此产生的主观时间感不够精确,以至于在决策中最大化奖励可能需要大量的行为调整(例如,为了赶在截止日期前完成决策,减少决策所需的证据)。因此,许多日常决策中的奖励最大化需要进行最佳的时间风险评估。在这里,我们回顾了时间决策文献,对相关已发表数据集进行了二次分析,并分析了一项新实验的结果。本文分为三个部分。在第一部分中,我们回顾了文献,并分析了现有的数据,这些数据表明动物在时间决策中考虑了其固有的行为可变性(即它们的“内源性定时不确定性”)。在第二部分中,我们回顾了文献,这些文献定量地证明了使用感知任务(人与老鼠)和运动定时任务(人与老鼠),可以近乎最优地评估亚秒和超秒间隔的时间风险。这部分内容还补充了原始研究,该研究测试了人类和大鼠在一项任务中的表现,该任务要求在两种与时间相关的数量之间找到最优平衡,以实现奖励最大化。这种最优平衡反过来又取决于定时不确定性的水平。与所回顾的文献一致,人类和大鼠在这项任务中表现出了近乎最优的时间风险评估。在第三部分中,我们讨论了定时不确定性在二选一感知决策任务中对奖励最大化的作用,并回顾了将定时不确定性作为绩效质量重要因素的文献。这些研究共同有力地支持了动物对其内源性定时不确定性进行规范性考虑的假设。通过将区间定时的心理物理学纳入奖励最大化的研究,我们的方法弥合了区间定时和决策文献之间的经验和理论差距。