| Literature DB >> 24872562 |
Jörg Gross1, Eva Woelbert2, Jan Zimmermann3, Sanae Okamoto-Barth2, Arno Riedl4, Rainer Goebel5.
Abstract
Humans can choose between fundamentally different options, such as watching a movie or going out for dinner. According to the utility concept, put forward by utilitarian philosophers and widely used in economics, this may be accomplished by mapping the value of different options onto a common scale, independent of specific option characteristics (Fehr and Rangel, 2011; Levy and Glimcher, 2012). If this is the case, value-related activity patterns in the brain should allow predictions of individual preferences across fundamentally different reward categories. We analyze fMRI data of the prefrontal cortex while subjects imagine the pleasure they would derive from items belonging to two distinct reward categories: engaging activities (like going out for drinks, daydreaming, or doing sports) and snack foods. Support vector machines trained on brain patterns related to one category reliably predict individual preferences of the other category and vice versa. Further, we predict preferences across participants. These findings demonstrate that prefrontal cortex value signals follow a common scale representation of value that is even comparable across individuals and could, in principle, be used to predict choice.Entities:
Keywords: choice prediction; common scale; decision making; subjective value; utility
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24872562 PMCID: PMC6795249 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5082-13.2014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167