| Literature DB >> 35589826 |
Pedro Castro-Rodrigues1,2,3,4, Thomas Akam2,5, Ivar Snorasson6, Marta Camacho1,2,7, Vitor Paixão2, Ana Maia1,2,3,8, J Bernardo Barahona-Corrêa1,2,3, Peter Dayan9,10, H Blair Simpson6,11, Rui M Costa2,3,12, Albino J Oliveira-Maia13,14,15.
Abstract
Explicit information obtained through instruction profoundly shapes human choice behaviour. However, this has been studied in computationally simple tasks, and it is unknown how model-based and model-free systems, respectively generating goal-directed and habitual actions, are affected by the absence or presence of instructions. We assessed behaviour in a variant of a computationally more complex decision-making task, before and after providing information about task structure, both in healthy volunteers and in individuals suffering from obsessive-compulsive or other disorders. Initial behaviour was model-free, with rewards directly reinforcing preceding actions. Model-based control, employing predictions of states resulting from each action, emerged with experience in a minority of participants, and less in those with obsessive-compulsive disorder. Providing task structure information strongly increased model-based control, similarly across all groups. Thus, in humans, explicit task structural knowledge is a primary determinant of model-based reinforcement learning and is most readily acquired from instruction rather than experience.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35589826 PMCID: PMC7613376 DOI: 10.1038/s41562-022-01346-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Hum Behav ISSN: 2397-3374