Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA; Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
Department of Neurobiology, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA; Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
Neuroimage. 2017 Nov 15;162:138-150. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.08.069. Epub 2017 Sep 5.
Real-life decision-making often involves combining multiple probabilistic sources of information under finite time and cognitive resources. To mitigate these pressures, people "satisfice", foregoing a full evaluation of all available evidence to focus on a subset of cues that allow for fast and "good-enough" decisions. Although this form of decision-making likely mediates many of our everyday choices, very little is known about the way in which the neural encoding of cue information changes when we satisfice under time pressure. Here, we combined human functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with a probabilistic classification task to characterize neural substrates of multi-cue decision-making under low (1500 ms) and high (500 ms) time pressure. Using variational Bayesian inference, we analyzed participants' choices to track and quantify cue usage under each experimental condition, which was then applied to model the fMRI data. Under low time pressure, participants performed near-optimally, appropriately integrating all available cues to guide choices. Both cortical (prefrontal and parietal cortex) and subcortical (hippocampal and striatal) regions encoded individual cue weights, and activity linearly tracked trial-by-trial variations in the amount of evidence and decision uncertainty. Under increased time pressure, participants adaptively shifted to using a satisficing strategy by discounting the least informative cue in their decision process. This strategic change in decision-making was associated with an increased involvement of the dopaminergic midbrain, striatum, thalamus, and cerebellum in representing and integrating cue values. We conclude that satisficing the probabilistic inference process under time pressure leads to a cortical-to-subcortical shift in the neural drivers of decisions.
现实生活中的决策通常涉及在有限的时间和认知资源下整合多个概率信息源。为了缓解这些压力,人们会“满意地”做出决策,即不充分评估所有可用证据,而是专注于允许快速做出“足够好”决策的一组线索。尽管这种决策形式可能会影响我们日常生活中的许多选择,但我们对在时间压力下满意地做出决策时线索信息的神经编码方式知之甚少。在这里,我们结合人类功能性磁共振成像(fMRI)和概率分类任务,在低(1500 毫秒)和高(500 毫秒)时间压力下,描述多线索决策的神经基质。我们使用变分贝叶斯推断来分析参与者的选择,以跟踪和量化每个实验条件下的线索使用情况,然后将其应用于模型 fMRI 数据。在低时间压力下,参与者的表现近乎最优,适当地整合了所有可用的线索来指导选择。皮质(前额叶和顶叶皮层)和皮质下(海马体和纹状体)区域都对单个线索权重进行编码,活动线性跟踪了每个试验中证据量和决策不确定性的变化。在时间压力增加的情况下,参与者通过在决策过程中忽略最不具信息量的线索,自适应地转变为使用满意策略。这种决策策略的变化与多巴胺能中脑、纹状体、丘脑和小脑在代表和整合线索值方面的参与度增加有关。我们的结论是,在时间压力下满意地进行概率推断过程会导致决策的神经驱动从皮质到皮质下的转变。