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Training diversity promotes absolute-value-guided choice.

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Humans adapt their decision-making strategies based on learning environment diversity. More options learned concurrently promote absolute value learning, while suppressing relative preference learning.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Science
  • Neuroscience
  • Behavioral Economics

Background:

  • Human decision-making involves learning either absolute values or relative preferences.
  • Environmental factors influencing these learning strategies remain largely unknown.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how environmental diversity influences the formation of absolute values versus relative preferences.
  • To test the hypothesis that increased environmental diversity promotes absolute value learning.

Main Methods:

  • A multi-day learning experiment with twenty sessions was conducted.
  • Participants chose between pairs of images with varying reward probabilities.
  • Learning strategies (absolute value vs. relative preference) were assessed by cross-session choices.

Main Results:

  • Learning more images concurrently within a session enhanced absolute-value learning.
  • Concurrent learning suppressed relative-preference learning.
  • Cumulative exposure to more options across sessions did not affect learning strategy.

Conclusions:

  • Human preference encoding adapts to the diversity of the immediate learning context.
  • The structure of the learning environment, specifically concurrent option diversity, shapes decision-making strategies.