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Temporal context effects on suboptimal choice.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Pigeons

Keywords:
Conditioned reinforcementInitial-link durationPigeonSiGN modelSuboptimal choiceTemporal context

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Area of Science:

  • Behavioral economics
  • Animal cognition
  • Decision-making under uncertainty

Background:

  • Reward anticipation and signaling influence choice behavior.
  • The Signal for Good News (SiGN) model explains how reward-predicting stimuli affect decisions.
  • Previous studies show pigeons sometimes prefer signaled suboptimal rewards.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To test quantitative predictions of the SiGN model in pigeons.
  • To investigate the impact of choice period duration on reward preference.
  • To determine if temporal context alters the relative value of choice options.

Main Methods:

  • Pigeons chose between a signaled 20% food reward and an unsignaled 50% food reward.
  • Choice period duration was systematically manipulated across two experiments.
  • The Signal for Good News (SiGN) model's predictions were quantitatively assessed.

Main Results:

  • Pigeons preferred the suboptimal signaled option at shorter choice durations.
  • Pigeons preferred the optimal unsignaled option at longer choice durations.
  • Results strongly supported the SiGN model's predictions.

Conclusions:

  • Choice period duration significantly influences preference between signaled and unsignaled rewards.
  • The relative value of options is dynamic and context-dependent, not fixed.
  • The SiGN model accurately predicts choice behavior influenced by temporal factors.