Behavioural correlate of choice confidence in a discrete trial paradigm

Date

2011-10-27

Authors

Lavan, Doron
McDonald, James S.
Westbrook, R. Frederick
Arabzadeh, Ehsan

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Abstract

How animals make choices in a changing and often uncertain environment is a central theme in the behavioural sciences. There is a substantial literature on how animals make choices in various experimental paradigms but less is known about the way they assess a choice after it has been made in terms of the expected outcome. Here, we used a discrete trial paradigm to characterise how the reward history shaped the behaviour on a trial by trial basis. Rats initiated each trial which consisted of a choice between two drinking spouts that differed in their probability of delivering a sucrose solution. Critically, sucrose was delivered after a delay from the first lick at the spouts--this allowed us to characterise the behavioural profile during the window between the time of choice and its outcome. Rats' behaviour converged to optimum choice, both during the acquisition phase and after the reversal of contingencies. We monitored the post-choice behaviour at a temporal precision of 1 millisecond; lick-response profiles revealed that rats spent more time at the spout with the higher reward probability and exhibited a sparser lick pattern. This was the case when we exclusively examined the unrewarded trials, where the outcome was identical. The differential licking profiles preceded the differential choice ratios and could thus predict the changes in choice behaviour.

Description

Keywords

animals, behavior, animal, drinking behavior, mental processes, rats, choice behavior, reward

Citation

Source

PLoS ONE

Type

Journal article

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