The value of foresight: how prospection affects decision-making

被引:44
|
作者
Pezzulo, Giovanni [1 ,2 ]
Rigoli, Francesco [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] CNR, Ist Linguist Computaz Antonio Zampolli, Pisa, Italy
[2] CNR, Ist Sci & Tecnol Cogniz, I-00185 Rome, Italy
[3] Univ Siena, I-53100 Siena, Italy
关键词
prospection; model-based; Bayesian; goal-directed; anticipatory planning; dread; anticipation; forward model; MENTAL TIME-TRAVEL; ORBITOFRONTAL CORTEX; FUTURE; BRAIN; EVOLUTION; ANTICIPATION; PREDICTION; PROJECTION; FRAMEWORK; COGNITION;
D O I
10.3389/fnins.2011.00079
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Traditional theories of decision-making assume that utilities are based on the intrinsic value of outcomes; in turn, these values depend on associations between expected outcomes and the current motivational state of the decision-maker. This view disregards the fact that humans ((and possibly other animals) have prospection abilities, which permit anticipating future mental processes and motivational and emotional states. For instance, we can evaluate future outcomes in light of the motivational state we expect to have when the outcome is collected, not ((only) when we make a decision. Consequently, we can plan for the future and choose to store food to be consumed when we expect to be hungry, not immediately. Furthermore, similarly to any expected outcome, we can assign a value to our anticipated mental processes and emotions. It has been reported that ((in some circumstances) human subjects prefer to receive an unavoidable punishment immediately, probably because they are anticipating the dread associated with the time spent waiting for the punishment. This article offers a formal framework to guide neuroeconomic research on how prospection affects decision-making. The model has two characteristics. First, it uses model-based Bayesian inference to describe anticipation of cognitive and motivational processes. Second, the utility-maximization process considers these anticipations in two ways: to evaluate outcomes ((e.g., the pleasure of eating a pie is evaluated differently at the beginning of a dinner, when one is hungry, and at the end of the dinner, when one is satiated), and as outcomes having a value themselves ((e.g., the case of dread as a cost of waiting for punishment). By explicitly accounting for the relationship between prospection and value, our model provides a framework to reconcile the utility-maximization approach with psychological phenomena such as planning for the future and dread.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Final Sampling Bias in Haptic Judgments: How Final Touch Affects Decision-Making
    Mitsuda, Takashi
    Yoshioka, Yuichi
    PERCEPTION, 2018, 47 (01) : 90 - 104
  • [42] A Model of Investment Decision-Making: How Adaptation to Losses Affects Future Selling Decisions
    Lee, Carmen K. M.
    Kraussl, Roman
    Lucas, Andre
    Paas, Leonard J.
    ADVANCES IN CONSUMER RESEARCH, VOL XXXVI, 2009, 36 : 606 - 606
  • [43] How Big Data Analytics Affects Supply Chain Decision-Making: An Empirical Analysis
    Chen, Daniel Q.
    Preston, David S.
    Swink, Morgan
    JOURNAL OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR INFORMATION SYSTEMS, 2021, 22 (05): : 1224 - 1244
  • [45] Value-Based Healthcare, PROMs and Shared Decision-Making - How Are They Connected?
    Rueter, Florian
    Meier, Christoph A.
    THERAPEUTISCHE UMSCHAU, 2022, 79 (08) : 359 - 363
  • [46] Shared decision-making - Why and how to?
    Pieterse, A.
    RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2023, 182 : S841 - S842
  • [47] Making sense of carbon footprints: how carbon literacy and quantitative literacy affects information gathering and decision-making
    Dosa, Katalin
    Russ, Rosemary S.
    ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION RESEARCH, 2020, 26 (03) : 421 - 453
  • [48] INTRAOPERATIVE ULTRASOUND OF THE LIVER AFFECTS OPERATIVE DECISION-MAKING
    PARKER, GA
    LAWRENCE, W
    HORSLEY, JS
    NEIFELD, JP
    COOK, D
    WALSH, J
    BREWER, W
    KORETZ, MJ
    ANNALS OF SURGERY, 1989, 209 (05) : 569 - 577
  • [49] DECISION-MAKING AS IT AFFECTS LONG-RANGE PLANNING
    STOLZE, WJ
    IRE TRANSACTIONS ON ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT, 1962, 9 (01): : 33 - 36
  • [50] Audience affects decision-making in a marmoset communication network
    Toarmino, Camille R.
    Wong, Lauren
    Miller, Cory T.
    BIOLOGY LETTERS, 2017, 13 (01)