Litcius/Paper detail

Goals, usefulness and abstraction in value-based choice

Benedetto De Martino, Aurelio Cortese

2022Trends in Cognitive Sciences46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar, while on the run, purportedly burned two million dollars in banknotes to keep his daughter warm. A stark reminder that, in life, circumstances and goals can quickly change, forcing us to reassess and modify our values on-the-fly. Studies in decision-making and neuroeconomics have often implicitly equated value to reward, emphasising the hedonic and automatic aspect of the value computation, while overlooking its functional (concept-like) nature. Here we outline the computational and biological principles that enable the brain to compute the usefulness of an option or action by creating abstractions that flexibly adapt to changing goals. We present different algorithmic architectures, comparing ideas from artificial intelligence (AI) and cognitive neuroscience with psychological theories and, when possible, drawing parallels.

Topics & Concepts

ParallelsValue (mathematics)Cognitive scienceNeuroeconomicsAbstractionAction (physics)PsychologyForcing (mathematics)CognitionCognitive psychologyComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceEpistemologyNeuroscienceMachine learningPhilosophyPhysicsGeologyEngineeringQuantum mechanicsClimatologyMechanical engineeringNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesComplex Systems and Time Series AnalysisStock Market Forecasting Methods