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Partial Adaptation of Obtained and Observed Value Signals Preserves Information about Gains and Losses.

Christopher J BurkeMichelle BaddeleyPhilippe N ToblerWolfram Schultz
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
Optimal value-based choice requires that the brain precisely and efficiently represents positive and negative outcomes. One way to increase efficiency is to adapt responding to the most likely outcomes in a given context. However, too strong adaptation would result in loss of precise representation (e.g., when the avoidance of a loss in a loss-context is coded the same as receipt of a gain in a gain-context). We investigated an intermediate form of adaptation that is efficient while maintaining information about received gains and avoided losses. We found that frontostriatal areas adapted to directly experienced outcomes, whereas lateral frontal and temporoparietal regions adapted to observed social outcomes. Importantly, adaptation was intermediate, in line with influential models of reference dependence in behavioral economics.
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