School of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, Beijing Key Laboratory of Behavior and Mental Health, IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Peking-Tsinghua Center for Life Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, China.
Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci. 2022 Jul;13(4):e1598. doi: 10.1002/wcs.1598. Epub 2022 Apr 19.
Strategic interactions, where an individual's payoff depends on the decisions of multiple intelligent agents, are ubiquitous among social animals. They span a variety of important social behaviors such as competition, cooperation, coordination, and communication, and often involve complex, intertwining cognitive operations ranging from basic reward processing to higher-order mentalization. Here, we review the progress and challenges in probing the neural and cognitive mechanisms of strategic behavior of interacting individuals, drawing an analogy to recent developments in studies of reward-seeking behavior, in particular, how research focuses in the field of strategic behavior have been expanded from adaptive behavior based on trial-and-error to flexible decisions based on limited prior experience. We highlight two important research questions in the field of strategic behavior: (i) How does the brain exploit past experience for learning to behave strategically? and (ii) How does the brain decide what to do in novel strategic situations in the absence of direct experience? For the former, we discuss the utility of learning models that have effectively connected various types of neural data with strategic learning behavior and helped elucidate the interplay among multiple learning processes. For the latter, we review the recent evidence and propose a neural generative mechanism by which the brain makes novel strategic choices through simulating others' goal-directed actions according to rational or bounded-rational principles obtained through indirect social knowledge. This article is categorized under: Economics > Interactive Decision-Making Psychology > Reasoning and Decision Making Neuroscience > Cognition.
策略互动是指个体的收益取决于多个智能体的决策,这种现象在社会性动物中普遍存在。它们涵盖了各种重要的社会行为,如竞争、合作、协调和沟通,通常涉及复杂的、交织在一起的认知操作,从基本的奖励处理到更高阶的心理化。在这里,我们回顾了探究相互作用个体的策略行为的神经和认知机制的进展和挑战,这与最近关于奖励寻求行为的研究进展类似,特别是研究重点是如何将基于试错的适应性行为扩展到基于有限先验经验的灵活决策。我们强调了策略行为领域的两个重要研究问题:(i)大脑如何利用过去的经验来学习策略性行为?(ii)在没有直接经验的情况下,大脑如何在新的策略情境中做出决策?对于前者,我们讨论了学习模型的效用,这些模型有效地将各种类型的神经数据与策略学习行为联系起来,并帮助阐明了多种学习过程之间的相互作用。对于后者,我们回顾了最近的证据,并提出了一个神经生成机制,即大脑通过根据间接社会知识获得的理性或有界理性原则模拟他人的目标导向行为来做出新的策略选择。本文属于以下类别:经济学 > 互动决策心理学 > 推理和决策 神经科学 > 认知。