惩罚(心理学)
任务(项目管理)
心理学
计算机科学
脑磁图
认知心理学
神经科学
社会心理学
脑电图
管理
经济
作者
Jessica McFadyen,Yunzhe Liu,Raymond J. Dolan
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41593-023-01287-7
摘要
Neural replay is implicated in planning, where states relevant to a task goal are rapidly reactivated in sequence. It remains unclear whether, during planning, replay relates to an actual prospective choice. Here, using magnetoencephalography (MEG), we studied replay in human participants while they planned to either approach or avoid an uncertain environment containing paths leading to reward or punishment. We find evidence for forward sequential replay during planning, with rapid state-to-state transitions from 20 to 90 ms. Replay of rewarding paths was boosted, relative to aversive paths, before a decision to avoid and attenuated before a decision to approach. A trial-by-trial bias toward replaying prospective punishing paths predicted irrational decisions to approach riskier environments, an effect more pronounced in participants with higher trait anxiety. The findings indicate a coupling of replay with planned behavior, where replay prioritizes an online representation of a worst-case scenario for approaching or avoiding. During planning, the brain rapidly activates memories of paths leading to reward or punishment. In a new MEG study, the authors show that choosing to approach under uncertainty evokes reactivation of potential punishment, while avoiding reactivates forgone rewards.
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