Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA; Learning Research and Development Center, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA; Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Learning Research and Development Center, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2018 Jun;114:214-230. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2018.04.023. Epub 2018 Apr 26.
When making a decision, we have to identify, collect, and evaluate relevant bits of information to ensure an optimal outcome. How we approach a given choice can be influenced by prior experience. Contextual factors and structural elements of these past decisions can cause a shift in how information is encoded and can in turn influence later decision-making. In this two-experiment study, we sought to manipulate declarative memory efficacy and decision-making in a concurrent discrimination learning task by altering the amount of information to be learned. Subjects learned correct responses to pairs of items across several repetitions of a 50- or 100-pair set and were tested for memory retention. In one experiment, this memory test interrupted learning after an initial encoding experience in order to test for early encoding differences and associate those differences with changes in decision-making. In a second experiment, we used fMRI to probe neural differences between the two list-length groups related to decision-making across learning and assessed subsequent memory retention. We found that a striatum-based system was associated with decision-making patterns when learning a longer list of items, while a medial cortical network was associated with patterns when learning a shorter list. Additionally, the hippocampus was exclusively active for the shorter list group. Altogether, these behavioral, computational, and imaging results provide evidence that multiple types of mnemonic representations contribute to experienced-based decision-making. Moreover, contextual and structural factors of the task and of prior decisions can influence what types of evidence are drawn upon during decision-making.
在做决策时,我们必须识别、收集和评估相关的信息,以确保最佳的结果。我们对待特定选择的方式可以受到先前经验的影响。这些过去决策的上下文因素和结构元素会导致信息的编码方式发生变化,从而反过来影响后续的决策。在这项两项实验研究中,我们试图通过改变要学习的信息量来操纵陈述性记忆效果和决策,在一个并发辨别学习任务中。受试者在 50 对或 100 对的几个重复中学习到对项目的正确反应,并接受记忆保留测试。在一个实验中,这个记忆测试在初始编码体验后中断学习,以测试早期编码差异,并将这些差异与决策变化联系起来。在第二个实验中,我们使用 fMRI 来探测与决策相关的两种列表长度组之间的神经差异,以及学习和评估随后的记忆保留。我们发现,当学习更长的项目列表时,一个基于纹状体的系统与决策模式相关,而当学习较短的项目列表时,一个内侧皮质网络与决策模式相关。此外,海马体仅对较短列表组活跃。总的来说,这些行为、计算和成像结果提供了证据,表明多种类型的记忆表示有助于基于经验的决策。此外,任务的上下文和结构因素以及先前的决策可以影响在决策过程中使用哪种类型的证据。