Is a bird in the hand worth two in the future? The neuroeconomics of intertemporal decision-making

被引:154
|
作者
Kalenscher, Tobias [1 ]
Pennartz, Cyriel M. A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Amsterdam, Fac Sci, Swammerdam Inst Life Sci, Anim Physiol & Cognitive Neurosci, NL-1098 SM Amsterdam, Netherlands
关键词
neuroeconomics; reward; decision-making; intertemporal decisions; delay discounting; risk; impulsivity; self-control; dopamine; glutamate; temporal difference learning; neural replay;
D O I
10.1016/j.pneurobio.2007.11.004
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
When making intertemporal decisions, i.e., decisions between outcomes occurring at different instants in time, humans and animals prefer rewards with short-term availability over rewards that become available in the long run. Discounted utility theory (DUT) is an influential normative model for intertemporal decisions that attempts to capture preference over time. It prescribes which is the best decision to take with respect to consistent, coherent and optimal choice. Over the last few decades, DUT's descriptive validity has been critically challenged. Empirical studies found systematic violations of several of DUT's assumptions, including time-consistency of preferences, stationarity, constant discounting and utility maximisation. To account for these anomalies, alternative models have been devised in various academic disciplines, including economics, psychology, biology, philosophy, and most lately, cognitive neuroscience. This article reviews the most recent literature on the behavioural and neural processes underlying intertemporal choices, and elucidates to which extent these findings can be used to explain violations of DUT's assumptions. In the first three sections, DUT is introduced, and behavioural anomalies are discussed. The fourth part focuses on the neuroscience of intertemporal choice, including its functional neuroanatomy, attempts to find a discounted value signal in the brain, and recent efforts to identify neural mechanisms producing time-inconsistencies. In the last section, the computational literature on neural learning mechanisms is reviewed. Then, a new, biologically plausible computational model of intertemporal choice is proposed that is able to explain many of the behavioural anomalies. The implications of these results help to understand why humans and animals frequently decide irrationally and to their long-term economic disadvantage, and which neural mechanisms underly such decisions. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:284 / 315
页数:32
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Relationship between an inconsistent degree of financial literacy and inconsistent decision-making in intertemporal choices
    Ventre, Viviana
    Martino, Roberta
    Torrecillas, Maria Jose Munoz
    HELIYON, 2024, 10 (05)
  • [42] Decision-Making and Action Selection in Two Minds
    Kitajima, Muneo
    Toyota, Makoto
    BIOLOGICALLY INSPIRED COGNITIVE ARCHITECTURES 2012, 2013, 196 : 187 - +
  • [43] Decision-Making in Drosophila with Two Conflicting Cues
    Cai, Kuijie
    Shen, Jihong
    Wu, Si
    ADVANCES IN NEURAL NETWORKS - ISNN 2011, PT I, 2011, 6675 : 93 - +
  • [44] Decision-making in international marketing: past, present and future
    Oliveira, Joao S.
    Hultman, Magnus
    Boso, Nathaniel
    Hodgkinson, Ian
    Hughes, Paul
    Nemkova, Ekaterina
    Souchon, Anne
    INTERNATIONAL MARKETING REVIEW, 2023, 40 (03) : 413 - 428
  • [45] Predicting Decision-Making in the Future: Human Versus Machine
    Ryu, Hoe Sung
    Ju, Uijong
    Wallraven, Christian
    PATTERN RECOGNITION, ACPR 2021, PT II, 2022, 13189 : 127 - 141
  • [46] The Parallax: The Possible Errors in the Quantification of Human Decision-Making Behavior in the Experiment of Neuroeconomics-A Perspective From Psychoanalysis
    Bai, Rui
    Pan, Weiyu
    Li, Chao
    PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA-THEORY RESEARCH PRACTICE AND POLICY, 2024, 16 (03) : 443 - 453
  • [47] Intact value-based decision-making during intertemporal choice in women with remitted anorexia nervosa? An fMRI study
    King, Joseph A.
    Bernardoni, Fabio
    Geisler, Daniel
    Ritschel, Franziska
    Doose, Arne
    Pauligk, Sophie
    Pasztor, Konrad
    Weidner, Kerstin
    Roessner, Veit
    Smolka, Michael N.
    Ehrlich, Stefan
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY & NEUROSCIENCE, 2020, 45 (02): : 108 - 116
  • [48] Neural mechanisms of intertemporal and risky decision-making in individuals with internet use disorder: A perspective from directed functional connectivity
    Li, Ziyi
    Zhang, Wei
    Du, Yunjing
    JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS, 2023, 12 (04) : 907 - 919
  • [49] Reduced delayed reward selection by Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment patients during intertemporal decision-making
    Geng, Zhi
    Wu, Xingqi
    Wang, Lu
    Zhou, Shanshan
    Tian, Yanghua
    Wang, Kai
    Wei, Ling
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 42 (03) : 298 - 306
  • [50] Time pressure effects on decision-making in intertemporal loss scenarios: an eye-tracking study
    Zhou, Yan-Bang
    Ruan, Shun-Jie
    Zhang, Kun
    Bao, Qing
    Liu, Hong-Zhi
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 15