2019
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/57v6k
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Fixation patterns in simple choice reflect optimal information sampling

Abstract: When faced with a decision between several options, people rarely fully consider every alternative. Instead, we direct our attention to the most promising candidates, focusing our limited cognitive resources on evaluating the options that we are most likely to choose. A growing body of empirical work has shown that attention plays an important role in human decision making, but it is still unclear how people choose with option to attend to at each moment in the decision making process. In this paper, we presen… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(76 citation statements)
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“…If gaze fixation is what focuses information processing on each option in turn, it could be that a DM will be inclined to gaze more at options whose values are less certain. Similar to the concept of exploration in the classic exploration/exploitation dilemma (e.g., Daw et al, 2006), this gaze bias could be instrumental for the DM to make more informed choices (Callaway et al, 2020). Or, it could be that a DM will be inclined to gaze more at options whose values are more certain.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If gaze fixation is what focuses information processing on each option in turn, it could be that a DM will be inclined to gaze more at options whose values are less certain. Similar to the concept of exploration in the classic exploration/exploitation dilemma (e.g., Daw et al, 2006), this gaze bias could be instrumental for the DM to make more informed choices (Callaway et al, 2020). Or, it could be that a DM will be inclined to gaze more at options whose values are more certain.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further work in which the size of the set is increased would be required to test this idea more stringently. Notably, two recent pre-prints have also introduced models to explain how the attentional patterns in choice are generated assuming optimal information sampling ( Jang et al, 2020 ; Callaway et al, 2020 ). Both models are based on Bayesian updates of value beliefs, with visual attention playing a role in selecting the information to sample.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2), we expect the nervous system to implement it only approximately (e.g., similar to [41] for multi-alternative decisions). Such an approximation has been recently suggested by Callaway and colleagues [10], where they used approaches from rational inattention to approximate optimal decision-making in the presence of an attentional bottleneck. Unlike our work, they assumed that the unattended item is completely ignored, and therefore could not investigate the effect of graded shifts of attentional resources between items (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%