How costs influence decision values for mixed outcomes

Deborah Talmi, Alex Pine

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    The things that we hold dearest often require a sacrifice, as epitomized in the maxim "no pain, no gain." But how is the subjective value of outcomes established when they consist of mixtures of costs and benefits? We describe theoretical models for the integration of costs and benefits into a single value, drawing on both the economic and the empirical literatures, with the goal of rendering them accessible to the neuroscience community.We propose two key assays that go beyond goodness of fit for deciding between the dominant additive model and four varieties of interactive models. First, how they model decisions between costs when reward is not on offer; and second, whether they predict changes in reward sensitivity when costs are added to outcomes, and in what direction. We provide a selective review of relevant neurobiological work from a computational perspective, focusing on those studies that illuminate the underlying valuation mechanisms. Cognitive neuroscience has great potential to decide which of the theoretical models is actually employed by our brains, but empirical work has yet to fully embrace this challenge. We hope that future research improves our understanding of how our brain decides whether mixed outcomes are worthwhile. © 2012 Talmi and Pine.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article numberArticle 146
    JournalFrontiers in Neuroscience
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2012

    Keywords

    • Aversive decision-making
    • Cost-benefit analysis
    • Decision-making
    • Decision-making and neuroeconomics
    • Economic models
    • Punishment
    • Reward

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