Experimentally revealed stochastic preferences for multicomponent choice options.

Journal: Journal of experimental psychology. Animal learning and cognition
PMID:

Abstract

Realistic, everyday rewards contain multiple components. An apple has taste and size. However, we choose in single dimensions, simply preferring some apples to others. How can such single-dimensional preference relationships refer to multicomponent choice options? Here, we measured how stochastic choices revealed preferences for 2-component milkshakes. The preferences were intuitively graphed as indifference curves that represented the orderly integration of the 2 components as trade-off: parts of 1 component were given up for obtaining 1 additional unit of the other component without a change in preference. The well-ordered, nonoverlapping curves satisfied leave-one-out tests, followed predictions by machine learning decoders and correlated with single-dimensional Becker-DeGroot-Marschak (BDM) auction-like bids for the 2-component rewards. This accuracy suggests a decision process that integrates multiple reward components into single-dimensional estimates in a systematic fashion. In interspecies comparisons, human performance matched that of highly experienced laboratory monkeys, as measured by accuracy of the critical trade-off between bundle components. These data describe the nature of choices of multicomponent choice options and attest to the validity of the rigorous economic concepts and their convenient graphic schemes for explaining choices of human and nonhuman primates. The results encourage formal behavioral and neural investigations of normal, irrational, and pathological economic choices. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).

Authors

  • Alexandre Pastor-Bernier
    Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience.
  • Konstantin Volkmann
    Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience.
  • Arkadiusz Stasiak
    Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience.
  • Fabian Grabenhorst
    Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, University of Cambridge, CB2 3DY Cambridge, United Kingdom fg292@cam.ac.uk arvdp@humtec.rwth-aachen.de.
  • Wolfram Schultz
    Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience.