Executive control by fronto-parietal activity explains counterintuitive decision behavior in complex value-based decision-making

Author:

Matsui Teppei,Hattori Yoshiki,Tsumura Kaho,Aoki Ryuta,Takeda Masaki,Nakahara Kiyoshi,Jimura Koji

Abstract

AbstractIn real life, humans make decisions by taking into account multiple independent factors, such as delay and probability. Cognitive psychology suggests that cognitive control mechanisms play a key role when facing such complex task conditions. However, in value-based decision-making, it still remains unclear to what extent cognitive control mechanisms become essential when the task condition is complex. In this study, we investigated decision-making behaviors and underlying neural mechanisms using a multifactor gambling task where participants simultaneously considered probability and delay. Decision-making behavior in the multifactor task was modulated by both probability and delay. The behavioral effect of probability was stronger than delay, consistent with previous studies. Furthermore, in a subset of conditions that recruited fronto-parietal activations, reaction times were paradoxically elongated despite lower probabilistic uncertainty. Notably, such a reaction time elongation did not occur in control tasks involving single factors. Meta-analysis of brain activations suggested an association between the paradoxical increase of reaction time and strategy switching. Together, these results suggest a novel aspect of complex value-based decision-makings that is strongly influenced by fronto-parietal cognitive control.HighlightsA value-based decision task with concurrent delay and probabilistic uncertaintyStronger behavioral effect of probability than delayParadoxically long reaction time despite low probabilistic uncertaintyThe task activated fronto-parietal cognitive control networkReaction time elongation coincided with activation similar to strategy switching

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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