Department of Psychology, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Department of Psychology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Elife. 2018 Nov 5;7:e39659. doi: 10.7554/eLife.39659.
Humans and other animals often violate economic principles when choosing between multiple alternatives, but the underlying neurocognitive mechanisms remain elusive. A robust finding is that adding a third option can alter the relative preference for the original alternatives, but studies disagree on whether the third option's value decreases or increases accuracy. To shed light on this controversy, we used and extended the paradigm of one study reporting a positive effect. However, our four experiments with 147 human participants and a reanalysis of the original data revealed that the positive effect is neither replicable nor reproducible. In contrast, our behavioral and eye-tracking results are best explained by assuming that the third option's value captures attention and thereby impedes accuracy. We propose a computational model that accounts for the complex interplay of value, attention, and choice. Our theory explains how choice sets and environments influence the neurocognitive processes of multi-alternative decision making.
人类和其他动物在多种选择之间进行选择时,经常违反经济原则,但潜在的神经认知机制仍难以捉摸。一个强有力的发现是,添加第三个选项可以改变对原始选项的相对偏好,但研究对第三个选项的价值是降低还是提高准确性存在分歧。为了阐明这一争议,我们使用并扩展了一项报告积极影响的研究范式。然而,我们的四项实验涉及 147 名人类参与者,以及对原始数据的重新分析表明,积极影响既不可复制也不可再现。相比之下,我们的行为和眼动追踪结果最好的解释是假设第三个选项的价值吸引了注意力,从而阻碍了准确性。我们提出了一个计算模型,该模型解释了价值、注意力和选择之间的复杂相互作用。我们的理论解释了选择集和环境如何影响多选择决策的神经认知过程。