Publication | Open Access
Fixation patterns in simple choice reflect optimal information sampling
124
Citations
84
References
2021
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingCognitionOptimal PolicyAttentionSocial SciencesFixation ProcessChoice ModelExperimental Decision MakingFixation PatternsManagementExperimental EconomicsChoice-process DataDecision TheoryStatisticsCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesDecision ProcessSequential Decision MakingPreference AggregationBehavioral EconomicsPreference ElicitationDecision Science
Simple choices (e.g., eating an apple vs. an orange) are made by integrating noisy evidence that is sampled over time and influenced by visual attention; as a result, fluctuations in visual attention can affect choices. But what determines what is fixated and when? To address this question, we model the decision process for simple choice as an information sampling problem, and approximate the optimal sampling policy. We find that it is optimal to sample from options whose value estimates are both high and uncertain. Furthermore, the optimal policy provides a reasonable account of fixations and choices in binary and trinary simple choice, as well as the differences between the two cases. Overall, the results show that the fixation process during simple choice is influenced dynamically by the value estimates computed during the decision process, in a manner consistent with optimal information sampling.
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