Cartoni Emilio, Moretta Tania, Puglisi-Allegra Stefano, Cabib Simona, Baldassarre Gianluca
Laboratory of Computational Embodied Neuroscience, Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, National Research Council of Italy Rome, Italy ; Dipartimento di Psicologia, Sapienza - Università di Roma Rome, Italy.
Laboratory of Computational Embodied Neuroscience, Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, National Research Council of Italy Rome, Italy ; Dipartimento di Psicologia Generale, Università di Padova Padua, Italy.
Front Psychol. 2015 Nov 17;6:1697. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01697. eCollection 2015.
Goal-directed behavior is influenced by environmental cues: in particular, cues associated with a reward can bias action choice toward actions directed to that same reward. This effect is studied experimentally as specific Pavlovian-instrumental transfer (specific PIT). We have investigated the hypothesis that cues associated to an outcome elicit specific PIT by rising the estimates of reward probability of actions associated to that same outcome. In other words, cues reduce the uncertainty on the efficacy of instrumental actions. We used a human PIT experimental paradigm to test the effects of two different instrumental contingencies: one group of participants had a 33% chance of being rewarded for each button press, while another had a 100% chance. The group trained with 33% reward probability showed a stronger PIT effect than the 100% group, in line with the hypothesis that Pavlovian cues linked to an outcome work by reducing the uncertainty of receiving it. The 100% group also showed a significant specific PIT effect, highlighting additional factors that could contribute to specific PIT beyond the instrumental training contingency. We hypothesize that the uncertainty about reward delivery due to testing in extinction might be one of these factors. These results add knowledge on how goal-directed behavior is influenced by the presence of environmental cues associated with a reward: such influence depends on the probability that we have to reach a reward, namely when there is less chance of getting a reward we are more influenced by cues associated with it, and vice versa.
特别是,与奖励相关的线索会使行动选择偏向于指向同一奖励的行动。这种效应在实验中作为特定的巴甫洛夫式工具性转移(特定PIT)进行研究。我们研究了这样一个假设,即与结果相关的线索通过提高与该相同结果相关的行动的奖励概率估计来引发特定PIT。换句话说,线索降低了工具性行动效果的不确定性。我们使用人类PIT实验范式来测试两种不同工具性意外情况的效果:一组参与者每次按下按钮有33%的奖励机会,而另一组有100%的机会。接受33%奖励概率训练的组比100%的组表现出更强的PIT效应,这与以下假设一致,即与结果相关的巴甫洛夫线索通过降低获得该结果的不确定性起作用。100%的组也表现出显著的特定PIT效应,突出了除工具性训练意外情况之外可能导致特定PIT的其他因素。我们假设由于在消退测试中奖励发放的不确定性可能是这些因素之一。这些结果增加了关于目标导向行为如何受到与奖励相关的环境线索存在影响的知识:这种影响取决于我们获得奖励的概率,即当获得奖励的机会较少时,我们更容易受到与其相关线索的影响,反之亦然。