Abstract
An important open question in neuroeconomics is how the brain represents the value of offers in a way that is both abstract (allowing for comparison) and concrete (preserving the details of the factors that influence value). Here we examine neuronal responses to risky and safe options in five brain regions that putatively encode value in male macaques. Surprisingly, we find no detectable overlap in the neural codes used for risky and safe options, even when the options have identical subjective values (as revealed by preference) in any of the regions. Indeed, responses are not just uncorrelated but occupy distinct (semi-orthogonal) encoding subspaces. Notably, however, these subspaces are linked through a linear transform of their constituent encodings, a property that allows for comparison of dissimilar option types. This encoding scheme allows these regions to have their cake and eat it too: they can encode the detailed factors that influence offer value (here, risky and safety) but also directly compare dissimilar offer types. Together these results suggest a neuronal basis for the qualitatively different psychological properties of risky and safe options and highlight the power of population geometry to resolve outstanding problems in neural coding.
Fine, J. M., Maisson, D. J. N., Yoo, S. B. M., Cash-Padgett, T. V., Wang, M. Z., Zimmermann, J., & Hayden, B. Y. (2023). Abstract value encoding in neural populations but not single neurons. J Neuro. [LINK]
Speaker: Fengjun Ma
Time: 9:00 am, 2023/6/19
Location: CIBR A622