Joe cable neuroeconomics3/30/2023 ![]() “From valuation to action: choice prediction in vmPFC and beyond” Solomon, Kent Conover, Peter Shizgal, Peter Dayan “Some work and some play: a normative, microscopic approach to allocating time between work and leisure” “How Serotonin and Dopamine Shape Moral Decision Making”Ĭrockett MJ, Siegel, Kurth- Nelson Z, Ousdal OT, Story GW, Dayan P, Dolan RJĢ013: Ritwik K Niyogi, Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit, UCL Tobias Kalenscher, Marijn van Wingerden, Sandra Schäble, Julen Hernandez-LallementĢ014: Molly Crockett, University of Oxford, England “Basolateral amygdala lesions abolish mutual reward preference in rats “ “Encoding of value and choice as separable, dynamic neural dimensions in orbitofrontal cortex”ĭaniel Kimmel, Gamaleldin Elsayed, John Cunningham, William NewsomeĢ015: Tobias Kalenscher, Universität Düsseldorf, Germany Wouter Kool, Samuel Gershman, Fiery Cushman “Neural and behavioral signatures of metacontrol in reinforcement learning” Jazmin Camchong, Samantha Abram, Sheila Specker, Kelvin Lim, Angus MacDonald, Mark Thomas, David RedishĢ018: Sudeep Bhatia, University of Pennsylvania “Translational neuroeconomics in addiction: Species-specific similarities and differences in dysfunction between wanting vs liking among humans and mice.” Shichun Wang, Maxwell Good, Siyana Hristova, Andrew Kayser, Ming HsuĢ019: Brian Sweis, University of Minnesota “Retrieval-Constrained Valuation: Toward Prediction of Open-Ended Decisions” “Imprecise learning drives variable but adaptive decisions under uncertainty in humans and artificial neural networks”Ģ020: Zhihao Zhang, University of California, Berkeley ![]() “Trait somatic anxiety is associated with reduced exploration and underestimation of relative uncertainty”īronze: Valentin Wyart, Ecole Normale Superieure Jonathan Schaffner, Philippe Tobler, Todd Hare “Neural codes in early sensory areas maximize fitness” Gold: Rafael Polania, University of Zurich Kiyohito Iigaya, Sanghyun Yi, Iman Wahle, Koranis Tanwisuth, John O’Doherty “Neural computation underlying aesthetic experience” Jo Cutler, Matthew Apps, Daniel Drew, Deva Jeyaretna, Masud Husain, Sanjay Manohar, Patricia Lockwood “Damage to ventromedial prefrontal cortex decreases effortful prosocial behaviours” Taken together, his dissertation studies concurrently demonstrated the critical function of OFC in both stages in the economic choices. He found that the two mental stages, valuation and comparison, could contribute to the behavioral variabilities and choice biases under sequential offers differently through different groups of cells. In the second project, he examined the neural correlates of behavioral variabilities and choice biases under sequential offers. He found that low-current microstimulation could facilitate the economic choices through valuation process on the other hand, high-current micro-stimulation could disrupt both the valuation and comparison stage during the economic decisions, and induce choice biases and increase choice variability. In the first project, he used micro-stimulation to build the casual link between OFC and economic choices. His PhD dissertation focused on the causal function of the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and the neural origins of the behavioral biases in the economic decisions. ![]() ![]() He is now a Wu Tsai Postdoctoral Associate at Yale University studying social interactions and social decisions. Weikang Shi obtained his bachelor’s degree in biological science from Peking University in China, and PhD degree in Neuroscience from Washington University in St. “Causal Function and Bias Correlation of the Orbitofrontal Cortex in Economic Choices. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |