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In real life, humans make decisions by considering multiple independent factors such as latency and probability
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Cognitive psychology believes that cognitive control mechanisms play a key role in the face of such complex task conditions
Published in the journal NeuroImage, KojiJimura et al.
used a multifactor gambling task in which participants considered both probability and delay to study decision-making behavior and underlying neural mechanisms
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In complex conditions, the research team studied decision-making behavior and neural activity in complex conditions
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To separate the effects of simple and complex task conditions, they devised a gambling task with probabilistic uncertainty and delayed outcomes, and controlled for probabilistic uncertainty or delayed control tasks on outcomes (D-task, P-task )
Quantitative conditions proposed in D-task and P-task and DP-task
Quantitative conditions proposed in D-task and P-task and DP-taskconditions are matched so that the effects of multiple factors can be isolated and presented simultaneously
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During the task, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to record brain activity to investigate the cognitive processes specifically used in multifactorial decision-making
Latency and Probability Acceptance Rate
Latency and Probability Acceptance RateLatency and Probability Reaction Time
Latency and Probability Reaction TimeDecision-making behavior in multifactorial tasks is mediated by both probability and delay
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The probabilistic behavioral effect is stronger than the delayed behavioral effect
Decision-making behavior in multifactorial tasks is mediated by both probability and delay
Brain activation correlates with probabilistic processing and latency in multifactorial tasks
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Furthermore, in a group of conditions that recruited fronto-parietal activation, reaction times were paradoxically prolonged despite lower probabilistic uncertainty
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Notably, this reaction time prolongation did not occur in control tasks involving a single factor
Reaction times were paradoxically prolonged in a group of conditions that recruited fronto-parietal activation, despite lower probability uncertainty , the reaction time is paradoxically extended
A large-scale meta-analysis of activated representations
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A meta-analysis of brain activity suggests an explanation that paradoxical increases in reaction time may be related to strategy switching
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Consistent with this interpretation, logistic regression analysis of behavioral data suggests the existence of multiple decision-making strategies
The paradoxical increase in reaction time may be related to strategy switching .
Functional interaction of brain regions associated with 100% chance-specific processing of the DP task
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Taken together, this study found that a novel and complex value-based decision-making task elicits significant activation in the fronto-parietal cortex
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Furthermore, the study suggests that these activations are related to the recruitment of cognitive control systems in complex situations
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Executive control by fronto-parietal activity explains counterintuitive decision behavior in complex value-based decision-making
Executive control by fronto-parietal activity explains counterintuitive decision behavior in complex value-based decision-makingLeave a comment here