A Reinforcement Learning Mechanism Responsible for the Valuation of Free Choice, Neuron (2014)

  • Paper Cockburn, Jeffrey and Collins, Anne G. E. and Frank, Michael J., A Reinforcement Learning Mechanism Responsible for the Valuation of Free Choice, Neuron, 83(3) 551-557, 2014

  • Abstract

Humans exhibit a preference for options they have freely chosen over equally valued options they have not; however, the neural mechanism that drives this bias and its functional significance have yet to be identified. Here, we propose a model in which choice biases arise due to amplified positive reward prediction errors associated with free choice. Using a novel variant of a probabilistic learning task, we show that choice biases are selective to options that are predominantly associated with positive outcomes. A polymorphism in DARPP-32, a gene linked to dopaminergic striatal plasticity and individual differences in reinforcement learning, was found to predict the effect of choice as a function of value. We propose that these choice biases are the behavioral byproduct of a credit assignment mechanism responsible for ensuring the effective delivery of dopaminergic reinforcement learning signals broadcast to the striatum.

Written on September 7, 2017