Persistency of priors-induced bias in decision behavior and the fMRI signal

被引:9
作者
Hansen, Kathleen A. [1 ]
Hillenbrand, Sarah F. [2 ]
Ungerleider, Leslie G. [1 ]
机构
[1] NIMH, Lab Brain & Cognit, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
[2] Univ Calif Berkeley, Helen Wills Neurosci Inst, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
来源
FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE | 2011年 / 5卷
关键词
choice; experience; expectation;
D O I
10.3389/fnins.2011.00029
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
It is well known that people take advantage of prior knowledge to bias decisions. To investigate this phenomenon behaviorally and in the brain, we acquired fMRI data while human subjects viewed ambiguous abstract shapes and decided whether a shape was of Category A (smoother) or B (bumpier). The decision was made in the context of one of two prior knowledge cues, 80/20 and 50/50. The 80/20 cue indicated that upcoming shapes had an 80% probability of being of one category, e.g., B, and a 20% probability of being of the other. The 50/50 cue indicated that upcoming shapes had an equal probability of being of either category. The ideal observer would bias decisions in favor of the indicated alternative at 80/20 and show zero bias at 50/50. We found that subjects did bias their decisions in the predicted direction at 80/20 but did not show zero bias at 50/50. Instead, at 50/50 the subjects retained biases of the same sign as their 80/20 biases, though of diminished magnitude. The signature of a persistent though diminished bias at 50/50 was also evident in fMRI data from frontal and parietal regions previously implicated in decision-making. As a control, we acquired fMRI data from naive subjects who experienced only the 50/50 stimulus distributions during both the pre-scan training and the fMRI experiment. The behavioral and fMRI data from the naive subjects reflected decision biases closer to those of the ideal observer than those of the prior knowledge subjects at 50/50. The results indicate that practice making decisions in the context of non-equal prior probabilities biases decisions made later when prior probabilities are equal. This finding may be related to the "anchoring and adjustment" strategy described in the psychology, economics, and marketing literatures, in which subjects adjust a first approximation response - the "anchor" - based on additional information, typically applying insufficient adjustment relative to the ideal observer.
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页数:9
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