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- Title
Valence and magnitude ambiguity in feedback processing.
- Authors
Gu, Ruolei; Feng, Xue; Broster, Lucas S.; Yuan, Lu; Xu, Pengfei; Luo, Yue ‐ jia
- Abstract
Background Outcome feedback which indicates behavioral consequences are crucial for reinforcement learning and environmental adaptation. Nevertheless, outcome information in daily life is often totally or partially ambiguous. Studying how people interpret this kind of information would provide important knowledge about the human evaluative system. Methods This study concentrates on the neural processing of partially ambiguous feedback, that is, either its valence or magnitude is unknown to participants. To address this topic, we sequentially presented valence and magnitude information; electroencephalography ( EEG) response to each kind of presentation was recorded and analyzed. The event-related potential components feedback-related negativity ( FRN) and P3 were used as indices of neural activity. Results Consistent with previous literature, the FRN elicited by ambiguous valence was not significantly different from that elicited by negative valence. On the other hand, the FRN elicited by ambiguous magnitude was larger than both the large and small magnitude, indicating the motivation to seek unambiguous magnitude information. The P3 elicited by ambiguous valence and ambiguous magnitude was not significantly different from that elicited by negative valence and small magnitude, respectively, indicating the emotional significance of feedback ambiguity. Finally, the aforementioned effects also manifested in the stage of information integration. Conclusion These findings indicate both similarities and discrepancies between the processing of valence ambiguity and that of magnitude ambiguity, which may help understand the mechanisms of ambiguous information processing.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL feedback; PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation; NEUROSCIENCES; ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY; REINFORCEMENT learning
- Publication
Brain & Behavior, 2017, Vol 7, Issue 5, pn/a
- ISSN
2162-3279
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/brb3.672