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Published October 1, 2011 | public
Journal Article

Separate encoding of model-based and model-free valuations in the human brain

Abstract

Behavioral studies have long shown that humans solve problems in two ways, one intuitive and fast (System 1, model-free), and the other reflective and slow (System 2, model-based). The neurobiological basis of dual process problem solving remains unknown due to challenges of separating activation in concurrent systems. We present a novel neuroeconomic task that predicts distinct subjective valuation and updating signals corresponding to these two systems. We found two concurrent value signals in human prefrontal cortex: a System 1 model-free reinforcement signal and a System 2 model-based Bayesian signal. We also found a System 1 updating signal in striatal areas and a System 2 updating signal in lateral prefrontal cortex. Further, signals in prefrontal cortex preceded choices that are optimal according to either updating principle, while signals in anterior cingulate cortex and globus pallidus preceded deviations from optimal choice for reinforcement learning. These deviations tended to occur when uncertainty regarding optimal values was highest, suggesting that disagreement between dual systems is mediated by uncertainty rather than conflict, confirming recent theoretical proposals.

Additional Information

© 2011 Elsevier Inc. Received 17 December 2010; revised 20 June 2011; Accepted 24 June 2011. Available online 2 July 2011. The authors would like to thank Peter Dayan for comments on an earlier version of the manuscript. UB was partly supported by the Gatsby Foundation, SQ and PB by grant SES-0527491 from the U.S. National Science Foundation, and PB by the Swiss Finance Institute.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023