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Abstract
Decision-making is guided by memories of option values. However, retrieving items from memory renders them malleable. Here, we show that merely retrieving values from memory and making a choice between options is sufficient both to induce changes to stimulus-reward associations in the hippocampus and to bias future decision-making. After allowing participants to make repeated choices between reward-conditioned stimuli, in the absence of any outcome, we observe that participants prefer stimuli they have previously chosen, and neglect previously unchosen stimuli, over otherwise identical-valued options. Using functional brain imaging, we show that decisions induce changes to hippocampal representations of stimulus-outcome associations. These changes are correlated with future decision biases. Our results indicate that choice-induced preference changes are partially driven by choice-induced modification of memory representations and suggest that merely making a choice - even without experiencing any outcomes - induces associative plasticity.
Decision-making is traditionally thought to be guided by memories of option values. Here, the authors challenge this view by showing that merely making a choice – even without experiencing any outcomes – alters neural representations of stimulus-reward associations and biases future decisions.
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1 Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Biological Psychology of Decision Making, Institute of Experimental Psychology, Düsseldorf, Germany (GRID:grid.411327.2) (ISNI:0000 0001 2176 9917); Otto-von-Guericke University, Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences, Magdeburg, Germany (GRID:grid.5807.a) (ISNI:0000 0001 1018 4307)
2 Otto-von-Guericke University, Department of Neurology, Magdeburg, Germany (GRID:grid.5807.a) (ISNI:0000 0001 1018 4307)