Nervous systems must encode information about the identity of expected outcomes to make adaptive decisions. However, the neural mechanisms underlying identity-specific value signaling remain poorly understood. By manipulating the value and identity of appetizing food odors in a pattern-based imaging paradigm of human classical conditioning, we were able to identify dissociable predictive representations of identity-specific reward in orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and identity-general reward in ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC). Reward-related functional coupling between OFC and olfactory (piriform) cortex and between vmPFC and amygdala revealed parallel pathways that support identityspecific and -general predictive signaling. The demonstration of identity-specific value representations in OFC highlights a role for this region in model-based behavior and reveals mechanisms by which appetitive behavior can go awry.reward value | associative learning | ventromedial prefrontal cortex | olfaction | multivoxel pattern analysis P redictive representations of future outcomes are critical for guiding adaptive behavior. To choose different types of rewards, such as food, shelter, and mates, it is essential that predictive signals contain specific information about the identity of those outcomes. Food rewards differ dramatically in their nutritional composition, and identity-specific cues allow differential foraging depending on current needs of the organism. The absence of precise mappings between predictive reward signals and their intended outcomes would have devastating effects on foodbased decisions.Despite the ecological relevance of outcome-specific predictive coding, which can be observed even in Drosophila (1), most research in human and nonhuman primates has focused on "common currency" signals of economic values in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) (2, 3) and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) (4-8). These signals, which by definition are independent of the specific nature of the reward, can be used to compare and choose between alternative outcomes, but are unable to inform expectations about the specific identity of the outcome. For this, identity-specific representations that conjointly represent information about both affective value (how good is it?) and outcome identity (what is it?) are necessary. Recent data suggest that the OFC is involved in signaling information about specific outcomes (9-14). For instance, many OFC neurons signal both the value and the identity of the predicted outcome (12), and OFC lesions diminish the effects of outcome identity (but not general affective value) on conditioned behavior (13).Recent imaging work has also begun to address how the human brain encodes predictive information about rewarding outcomes. One study (9) used a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) adaptation paradigm to provide evidence for identity-based codes for reward in the OFC. Another investigation (4) used fMRI data from a willingness to pay auction combined with decoding techniques to reveal...