Neural mechanisms of confidence propagation in hierarchical partially observable decision-making
Risa Katayama, Wako Yoshida, Ken-ichi Amemori, Shin Ishii

TL;DR
The study explores how the brain handles confidence in complex decision-making environments with hidden information.
Contribution
The research identifies specific brain regions and neural pathways involved in encoding and modulating confidence in hierarchical decision-making.
Findings
The ventral insular cortex and presupplementary motor area encode confidence in deck-type inference during decision-making.
Individual differences in modulating value-belief and decision confidence are linked to brain connectivity patterns.
Higher-order confidence influences lower-order confidence through multiple neural pathways.
Abstract
Our daily decision-making often occurs in environments that are partially observable and hierarchically organized, introducing multiple sources of uncertainty in the decision-making process. To investigate how the brain incorporates subjective confidence stemming from the hierarchical partially observable structure, we developed the twenty-one task, a “blind” blackjack card game with hidden card-deck types. Combining computational modeling and neuroimaging demonstrates that the ventral insular cortex (vIC), presupplementary motor area (SMA), and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) encode confidence in deck-type inference during decision-making. Furthermore, individuals vary in how they modulate value-belief and decision confidence based on their deck confidence; these modulations are predicted by the effect of deck confidence on functional connectivity between the vIC and pregenual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Cognitive Science and Mapping · Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics
