Difference between revisions of "RPE"
From Deliberative Democracy Institiute Wiki
(→Related Papers) |
(→Thougths) |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
==Thougths== | ==Thougths== | ||
− | It seams that when we gossip or reading news, the RPE is working, and driving us to understand what can be the causes of the things we see. Cause is an economic description (explanation) for a set of phenomena. If we will achieve good explanations, we will be less surprised and will be able to better predict our interaction with the world. | + | It seams that when we gossip or reading news, the RPE is working, and driving us to understand what can be the causes of the things we see. Cause is an economic description (explanation) for a set of phenomena. If we will achieve good explanations, we will be less surprised and will be able to better predict our interaction with the world. [[User:WinSysop|Tal Yaron]] |
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 00:26, 24 October 2012
Reward Prediction Error (RPE), is thought to be a the activator of learning when ther is a difference between accepted reward and actual reward[1]. but it is debated[2].
It may be correlated to novelty seeking and activation of system 2
Learning is induced because of surprise. The dACC is concerned more with attention and motor control processes involved in behavioral adjustment. The dopamine RPE system is the process from which a learning is happening[3].
Related Papers
Dorsal ACC decision making system
Thougths
It seams that when we gossip or reading news, the RPE is working, and driving us to understand what can be the causes of the things we see. Cause is an economic description (explanation) for a set of phenomena. If we will achieve good explanations, we will be less surprised and will be able to better predict our interaction with the world. Tal Yaron
References
- ↑ article 2011 PNAS
- ↑ article 2007
- ↑ Benjamin Y. Hayden1,2, Sarah R. Heilbronner, John M. Pearson, and Michael L. Platt, Surprise Signals in Anterior Cingulate Cortex: Neuronal Encoding of Unsigned Reward Prediction Errors Driving Adjustment in Behavior, The Journal of Neuroscience, 16 March 2011, 31(11): 4178-4187