Neural Prediction Errors Reveal a Risk-Sensitive Reinforcement-Learning Process in the Human Brain
Abstract
Humans and animals are exquisitely, though idiosyncratically, sensitive to risk or variance in the outcomes of their actions. Economic, psychological, and neural aspects of this are well studied when information about risk is provided explicitly. However, we must normally learn about outcomes from experience, through trial and error. Traditional models of such reinforcement learning focus on learning about the mean reward value of cues and ignore higher order moments such as variance. We used fMRI to test whether the neural correlates of human reinforcement learning are sensitive to experienced risk. Our analysis focused on anatomically delineated regions of a priori interest in the nucleus accumbens, where blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signals have been suggested as correlating with quantities derived from reinforcement learning. We first provide unbiased evidence that the raw BOLD signal in these regions corresponds closely to a reward prediction error. We then derive from this signal the learned values of cues that predict rewards of equal mean but different variance and show that these values are indeed modulated by experienced risk. Moreover, a close neurometric–psychometric coupling exists between the fluctuations of the experience-based evaluations of risky options that we measured neurally and the fluctuations in behavioral risk aversion. This suggests that risk sensitivity is integral to human learning, illuminating economic models of choice, neuroscientific models of affective learning, and the workings of the underlying neural mechanisms.
Additional Information
© 2012 The Authors. Received Oct. 20, 2010; revised Oct. 8, 2011; accepted Nov. 7, 2011. This research was supported by a Hebrew University Rector's Fellowship, a Human Frontiers Science Program fellowship, and a Sloan Research Fellowship (Y.N.), the Gatsby Charitable Foundation (P.D.,Y.N.), the Gimbel Discovery Fund for Neuroscience (J.P.O.), and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (J.P.O.). We are indebted to Laura deSouza for marking the anatomical ROIs and grateful to Timothy Behrens, Peter Bossaerts, Carlos Brody, Nathaniel Daw, Marie Monfils, Daniela Schiller, Geoffrey Schoenbaum, Ben Seymour, and John White for extremely helpful comments on previous versions of this manuscript. Author contributions: Y.N., P.D., and J.P.O. designed research; Y.N. and J.A.E. performed research; Y.N., P.D., and J.P.O. analyzed data; Y.N., P.D., and J.P.O. wrote the paper.Attached Files
Published - Niv2012p17065J_Neurosci.pdf
Supplemental Material - Supp_Material.pdf
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Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC6621075
- Eprint ID
- 29284
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20120214-132950467
- Hebrew University
- Human Frontier Science Program
- Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
- Gatsby Charitable Foundation
- Gimbel Discovery Fund for Neuroscience
- Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
- Created
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2012-02-14Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-09Created from EPrint's last_modified field