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    Tracking subjects' strategies in behavioural choice experiments at trial resolution

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    Author
    Sami, Musa
    Keyword
    Decision making
    Psychology
    Date
    2024
    
    Metadata
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    DOI
    10.7554/eLife.86491
    Publisher's URL
    https://elifesciences.org/articles/86491
    Abstract
    Investigating how, when, and what subjects learn during decision-making tasks requires tracking their choice strategies on a trial-by-trial basis. Here we present a simple but effective probabilistic approach to tracking choice strategies at trial resolution using Bayesian evidence accumulation. We show this approach identifies both successful learning and the exploratory strategies used in decision tasks performed by humans, non-human primates, rats, and synthetic agents. Both when subjects learn and when rules change the exploratory strategies of win-stay and lose-shift, often considered complementary, are consistently used independently. Indeed, we find the use of lose-shift is strong evidence that subjects have latently learnt the salient features of a new rewarded rule. Our approach can be extended to any discrete choice strategy, and its low computational cost is ideally suited for real-time analysis and closed-loop control.
    Citation
    Maggi, S., Hock, R. M., O'Neill, M., Buckley, M., Moran, P. M., Bast, T., Sami, M. & Humphries, M. D. (2024). Tracking subjects' strategies in behavioural choice experiments at trial resolution. ELife, 13, pp.e86491.
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/18464
    Note
    Copyright Maggi et al. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
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    Mental Health and Behavioural Conditions: General and Other

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