任务不变先验解释了在获得和损失任务中逐个尝试的主动回避行为。

Tobias Granwald, Peter Dayan, Máté Lengyel, Marc Guitart-Masip
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引用次数: 0

摘要

无法做出积极避免负面结果的决定是无助感的核心。在贝叶斯框架中,决定是否采取行动是由对世界的信念决定的,这种信念可以被描述为先验。然而,这些先验并没有被量化。在这里,我们执行了两项任务,其中279名参与者决定是否尝试主动回避行动。在这两项任务中,参与者都要在肯定会导致不同程度的负面结果的被动选择和让他们有可能避免负面结果的昂贵主动选择之间做出决定。这些任务在框架和效价上有所不同,这使我们能够测试先前产生的行为偏差是特定于问题的,还是与任务无关的、普遍的。我们对提供不同数据结构解释的模型进行了广泛的比较,发现具有主动回避任务不变先验的贝叶斯模型最适合参与者的逐个试验行为。该先验参数是可靠的,被试自我评价的积极情绪与该先验呈弱相关,具有乐观先验的被试报告的积极情绪水平较高。这些结果表明,个体先前信念的差异可以解释积极回避消极结果的决定,为贝叶斯无助概念化提供了证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A task-invariant prior explains trial-by-trial active avoidance behaviour across gain and loss tasks.

A task-invariant prior explains trial-by-trial active avoidance behaviour across gain and loss tasks.

A task-invariant prior explains trial-by-trial active avoidance behaviour across gain and loss tasks.

A task-invariant prior explains trial-by-trial active avoidance behaviour across gain and loss tasks.

Failing to make decisions that would actively avoid negative outcomes is central to helplessness. In a Bayesian framework, deciding whether to act is informed by beliefs about the world that can be characterised as priors. However, these priors have not been previously quantified. Here we administered two tasks in which 279 participants decided whether to attempt active avoidance actions. In both tasks, participants decided between a passive option that would for sure result in a negative outcome of varying size, and a costly active option that allowed them a probability of avoiding the negative outcome. The tasks differed in framing and valence, allowing us to test whether the prior generating biases in behaviour is problem-specific or task-independent and general. We performed extensive comparisons of models offering different structural explanations of the data, finding that a Bayesian model with a task-invariant prior for active avoidance provided the best fit to participants' trial-by-trial behaviour. The parameters of this prior were reliable, and participants' self-rated positive affect was weakly correlated with this prior such that participants with an optimistic prior reported higher levels of positive affect. These results show that individual differences in prior beliefs can explain decisions to engage in active avoidance of negative outcomes, providing evidence for a Bayesian conceptualization of helplessness.

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