The Attraction Effect Modulates Reward Prediction Errors and Intertemporal Choices.
Sebastian GluthJared M HotalingJörg RieskampPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Many theories of value-based decision making assume that people first assess the attractiveness of each option independently of each other and then pick the option with the highest subjective value. The attraction effect, however, shows that adding a new option to a choice set can change the relative value of the existing options, which is a violation of the independence principle. Using an intertemporal choice framework, we tested whether such violations also occur when the brain encodes the difference between expected and received rewards (i.e., the reward prediction error). Our results suggest that neither intertemporal choice nor valuation without choice adhere to the independence principle.