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Contribution Details

Type Journal Article
Scope Discipline-based scholarship
Title Neural response to reward anticipation under risk is nonlinear in probabilities
Organization Unit
Authors
  • Colin Camerer
  • Ming Hsu
  • Ian Michael Krajbich
  • Chen Zhao
Item Subtype Original Work
Refereed Yes
Status Published in final form
Language
  • English
Journal Title The Journal of Neuroscience
Publisher Society for Neuroscience
Geographical Reach international
Volume 29
Number 7
Page Range 2231 - 2237
Date 2009
Date Annual Report 2011
Abstract Text A widely observed phenomenon in decision making under risk is the apparent overweighting of unlikely events and the underweighting of nearly certain events. This violates standard assumptions in expected utility theory, which requires that expected utility be linear (objective) in probabilities. Models such as prospect theory have relaxed this assumption and introduced the notion of a “probability weighting function,” which captures the key properties found in experimental data. This study reports functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data that neural response to expected reward is nonlinear in probabilities. Specifically, we found that activity in the striatum during valuation of monetary gambles are nonlinear in probabilities in the pattern predicted by prospect theory, suggesting that probability distortion is reflected at the level of the reward encoding process. The degree of nonlinearity reflected in individual subjects’ decisions is also correlated with striatal activity across subjects. Our results shed light on the neural mechanisms of reward processing, and have implications for future neuroscientific studies of decision making involving extreme tails of the distribution, where probability weighting provides an explanation for commonly observed behavioral anomalies.
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