Modulation of Active Exploratory Behaviors in Humans

<p>Human learning and memory relies on a broad network of neural substrates, and is sensitive to a range of environmental factors and behaviors. The present studies are designed to investigate the modulation of active exploration behaviors in humans. In the current work, we operationalize expl...

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Main Author: Clement, Nathaniel
Other Authors: Adcock, Rachel A
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/13425
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spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-134252017-01-06T03:36:29ZModulation of Active Exploratory Behaviors in HumansClement, NathanielPsychologyAssociative LearningExplorationLearningMemoryMotivation<p>Human learning and memory relies on a broad network of neural substrates, and is sensitive to a range of environmental factors and behaviors. The present studies are designed to investigate the modulation of active exploration behaviors in humans. In the current work, we operationalize exploration in two ways: participants’ spatial navigation (using a computer mouse) in environments containing rewarding and informative stimuli, and participants’ eyegaze activity while viewing images on a computer screen. The study described in Study 1 investigates the relationship between spatial exploration and reward, using participants’ reported anxiety levels to predict between-subject variability in vigor and information-seeking. The study described in Study 2 investigates the relationship between cue-outcome predictive validity and eyegaze behavior during learning; additionally, we test the extent to which differing states of expectation drive differences in eyegaze behavior to novel images. The study described in Study 3 expands on the questions raised in Study 2: using functional imaging and eyetracking, we investigate the relationship between predictive validity, gaze, and the neural systems supporting active exploration. Taken together, the findings in the present study suggest that emerging certainty in reward outcomes, rather than uncertainty, drives exploration and associative learning for events and their outcomes as well as encoding into long-term memory.</p>DissertationAdcock, Rachel A2016Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/13425
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Associative Learning
Exploration
Learning
Memory
Motivation
spellingShingle Psychology
Associative Learning
Exploration
Learning
Memory
Motivation
Clement, Nathaniel
Modulation of Active Exploratory Behaviors in Humans
description <p>Human learning and memory relies on a broad network of neural substrates, and is sensitive to a range of environmental factors and behaviors. The present studies are designed to investigate the modulation of active exploration behaviors in humans. In the current work, we operationalize exploration in two ways: participants’ spatial navigation (using a computer mouse) in environments containing rewarding and informative stimuli, and participants’ eyegaze activity while viewing images on a computer screen. The study described in Study 1 investigates the relationship between spatial exploration and reward, using participants’ reported anxiety levels to predict between-subject variability in vigor and information-seeking. The study described in Study 2 investigates the relationship between cue-outcome predictive validity and eyegaze behavior during learning; additionally, we test the extent to which differing states of expectation drive differences in eyegaze behavior to novel images. The study described in Study 3 expands on the questions raised in Study 2: using functional imaging and eyetracking, we investigate the relationship between predictive validity, gaze, and the neural systems supporting active exploration. Taken together, the findings in the present study suggest that emerging certainty in reward outcomes, rather than uncertainty, drives exploration and associative learning for events and their outcomes as well as encoding into long-term memory.</p> === Dissertation
author2 Adcock, Rachel A
author_facet Adcock, Rachel A
Clement, Nathaniel
author Clement, Nathaniel
author_sort Clement, Nathaniel
title Modulation of Active Exploratory Behaviors in Humans
title_short Modulation of Active Exploratory Behaviors in Humans
title_full Modulation of Active Exploratory Behaviors in Humans
title_fullStr Modulation of Active Exploratory Behaviors in Humans
title_full_unstemmed Modulation of Active Exploratory Behaviors in Humans
title_sort modulation of active exploratory behaviors in humans
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/13425
work_keys_str_mv AT clementnathaniel modulationofactiveexploratorybehaviorsinhumans
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