Department of Neuroscience, University of Montréal, Montréal, Quebec, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2020 Mar 1;123(3):1090-1102. doi: 10.1152/jn.00613.2019. Epub 2020 Feb 12.
Neurophysiological studies suggest that when decisions are made between concrete actions, the selection process involves a competition between potential action representations in the same sensorimotor structures involved in executing those actions. However, it is unclear how such models can explain situations, often encountered during natural behavior, in which we make decisions while were are already engaged in performing an action. Does the process of deliberation characterized in classical studies of decision-making proceed the same way when subjects are deciding while already acting? In the present study, human subjects continuously tracked a target moving in the horizontal plane and were occasionally presented with a new target to which they could freely choose to switch at any time, whereupon it became the new tracked target. We found that the probability of choosing to switch increased with decreasing distance to the new target and increasing size of the new target relative to the tracked target, as well as when the direction to the new target was aligned (either toward or opposite) to the current tracking direction. However, contrary to our expectations, subjects did not choose targets that minimized the energetic costs of execution, as calculated by a biomechanical model of the arm. When the constraints of continuous tracking were removed in variants of the task involving point-to-point movements, the expected preference for lower cost choices was seen. These results are discussed in the context of current theories of nested feedback control, internal models of forward dynamics, and high-dimensional neural spaces. Current theories of decision-making primarily address how subjects make decisions before executing selected actions. However, in our daily lives we often make decisions while already performing some action (e.g., while playing a sport or navigating through a crowd). To gain insight into how current theories can be extended to such "decide-while-acting" scenarios, we examined human decisions during continuous manual tracking and found some intriguing departures from how decisions are made in classical "decide-then-act" paradigms.
神经生理学研究表明,当在具体动作之间做出决策时,选择过程涉及到在执行这些动作所涉及的相同感觉运动结构中潜在动作表示之间的竞争。然而,目前尚不清楚这些模型如何解释我们在自然行为中经常遇到的情况,即在我们已经执行动作的过程中做出决策。在经典决策研究中,当主体在已经行动时做出决策时,审议过程是否以相同的方式进行?在本研究中,人类受试者持续跟踪在水平面上移动的目标,并偶尔会出现一个新目标,他们可以随时自由选择切换,新目标随后成为新的跟踪目标。我们发现,选择切换的概率随着与新目标的距离减小而增加,与跟踪目标相比,新目标的大小增加,以及当新目标的方向与当前跟踪方向对齐(朝向或相反)时增加。然而,与我们的预期相反,受试者并没有选择使执行成本最小化的目标,如通过手臂的生物力学模型计算得出的那样。当任务的变体涉及到点对点运动时,连续跟踪的约束被移除,预计会看到对低成本选择的偏好。这些结果在嵌套反馈控制、前向动力学的内部模型和高维神经空间的当前理论背景下进行了讨论。当前的决策理论主要解决主体在执行所选动作之前如何做出决策。然而,在我们的日常生活中,我们经常在已经执行某些动作时做出决策(例如,在运动或在人群中导航时)。为了深入了解如何将当前理论扩展到这种“边做边决策”的情况,我们在连续手动跟踪过程中检查了人类决策,发现了一些有趣的与经典“决定后行动”范式中的决策方式的背离。