Title: Ming Hsu
1Neural Systems Responding to Degrees of
Uncertainty in Human Decision-Making
- Ming Hsu
- Meghana Bhatt
- Ralph Adolphs
- Daniel Tranel
- Colin Camerer
2What is Neuroeconomics
- Neuroeconomics seeks to ground economic theory in
details about how the brain works. - Adjudicate competing models
- Debates between rational-choice and behavioral
models usually revolve around psychological
constructs - E.g. loss-aversion and a preference for immediate
rewards. - Before, these constructs have typically been
unobservable. - Provide new data and stylized facts to inspire
and constrain models.
3Example Dual-self models
- A number of them in recent years
- Bernheim Rangel 2004
- Benahib and Bisin 2004
- Benabou and Pycia 2002
- Brocas and Carrillo 2005
- Fudenberg Levine 2005
- Miao 2005
- This is consistent with recent evidence from MRI
studies, such as McClure et al. 2004, that
suggests that short-term impulsive behavior is
associated with different areas of the brain than
long-term planned behavior. (Fudenberg Levine) - The notion of a dual-self has been around since
Plato. - Neuroscientific data new.
4Tools of Neuroeconomics
- These (and other) tools enable us to study
economic behavior at the neural level - Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
- Indirect observation of neuronal activity
- Temporal resolution 2-3 secs
- Spatial resolution 2-3 mm3
- Lesion patients
- Assess the necessity of brain region for certain
behavior. - Spatial resolution varies with size of lesion.
- Modularity this organizing principle of the
brain is what allows us to use these tools.
5Decision Making Under Risk and Ambiguity
- Ambiguity and ambiguity aversion is a
long-standing topic in decision theory. - Knight, Keynes, Ellsberg, and co.
- There is a large theoretical and empirical
literature to draw upon. - Schmeidler 1989
- Gilboa Schmeidler 1988
- Camerer Weber 1992
- Invoked to explain a number of economic phenomena
- Home bias
- Equity premium
- Entrepeneurship
- The behavioral phenomenon is robust
- Camerer Weber reviews experimental evidence.
6Decision Making Under Risk and Ambiguity
- Ambiguity is uncertainty about probability,
created by missing information that is relevant
and could be known. - Risk Probability of head on a fair coin toss
(known p, p 0.5) - Ambiguity Probability of head on a biased coin
of unknown bias (unknown p, p ?) - Ellsberg Paradox
- Urn A with n balls n/2 red, n/2 green.
- Urn B with n balls k red, n-k green (k unknown).
- Lottery choose color, then ball from urn. If
match, win x. If mismatch, 0. - Most people indifferent between choosing red or
green in either urn A or urn B. - Non-trivial proportion prefer urn A.
7Approaches to Decision-Making Under Ambiguity
- Deny existence of ambiguity/risk distinction
- Models of ambiguity aversion
- Non-additive probabilities (capacities and
Choquet integrals) - set-valued probabilities (min-max)
- 2nd order prior and nonlinear weighting
- State dependent utility models
- Overgeneralization of a rational aversion to
asymmetric information
8What Neuroeconomics Can Say?
- Are risk and ambiguity distinguished at a neural
level. - If so, are the underlying neural circuitry
- Two systems
- Competing
- Independent
- One system
- Can this data be used to constrain the existing
models.
9fMRI Experiment Design
- Ellsberg type gambles
- Canonical example of decision-making under
ambiguity - World knowledge questions
- Control for possible framing effects of numerical
information - Closer analog of real-world decisions
- Adverse selection
- Unnatural habitat hypothesis.
- Betting against agent who has better information.
10Ellsberg Type Questions
11Real World Questions
12Betting Against Informed Opponent
13Experimental Sequence
Ambiguous condition
Risk condition
- Self paced trials
- 48 trials total
- Stimuli present for 2 sec after choice
- Blank screen 4-10 sec
- Each session about 10-15 min
14Statistical Analysis of fMRI Data
Courtesy of http//www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/spm
15Data Analysis
- Individual Analysis
- Ambiguity gt Risk ?iamb gt ?irisk
- Risk gt Ambiguity ?irisk gt ?iamb
- Group Analysis Random Effects
- ?amb gt ?risk
- ?risk gt ?amb
- Linear model
- 64x64x32 time series
- Dummies
- damb ambiguity trial
- drisk risk trial
- dpost post-decision interval
- ? Hemodynamic response convolution operator
16Results
- We find three main clusters of activation
- Amygdala Fear of the unknown
- Lateral orbitofrontal (OFC) integration of
- Dorsal striatum
- They appear to separate into two processes
- A fast-responding, vigilance signal process
(amygdala OFC). - A slower-responding, anticipated reward region
(dorsal striatum). - Constitute a generalized system for
decision-making under uncertainty (including both
risk and ambiguity). - Behavioral experiments with lesion patients show
that the OFC is necessary for distinguishing risk
and ambiguity.
17Ambiguity gt Risk
18Risk gt Ambiguity
19Correlation of Behavior with Imaging
20Lesion Patient Experiment
- Lesion patients allow us to assess the necessity
of a brain region for behavior. - Two groups
- OFC lesion location of damage overlaps with OFC
activation. - Control lesion temporal lobe patients, lesions
do not overlap with activation. - Groups matched on IQ, verbal abilities, etiology.
21Lesion Patient Experiment
22Risk and Ambiguity Attitudes
23Conclusion
- Our results suggest
- Risk and ambiguity are product of a single system
- Produced by two possibly competing processes
- To distinguish between levels of uncertainty
- With ambiguity and risk being limiting cases
- The OFC is necessary for proper functioning of
the system.
24Future Research
- Behavioral Typing (Ellsberg 1967)
- There are those who do not violate the axioms, or
say they wont, even in these situations such
subjects tend to apply the axioms rather their
intuition. - Some violate the axioms cheerfully, even with
gusto. - Others sadly but persistently, having looked into
their hearts, found conflicts with the axioms and
decided, in Samuelsons phrase, to satisfy their
preferences and let the axioms satisfy
themselves. - Still others tend, intuitively, to violate the
axiom but feel guilty about it and go back into
further analysis. - Further establish direction of causality
- Exogenously stimulate the amygdala.
- Look in special populations of striatal
differences.
25END