2020
DOI: 10.1101/2020.07.22.216234
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A normative account of choice history effects in mice and humans

Abstract: Choice history effects describe how future choices depend on the history of past choices. Choice history effects are typically framed as a bias rather than an adaptive phenomenon because the phenomenon generally degrades reward rates in experimental tasks. How-ever, in natural habitats, choices made in the past constrain choices that can be made in the future. For foraging animals, the probability of obtaining a reward in a given patch depends on the degree to which the animals have exploited the patch in the … Show more

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