Outcome context-dependence is not WEIRD: Comparing reinforcement- and description-based economic preferences worldwide.

Hernan Anllo,Sophie Bavard, FatimaEzzahra Benmarrakchi,Darla Bonagura,Fabien Cerrotti, Mirona Cicue, Maëlle Gueguen, Eugenio Guzmán,Dzerassa Kadieva, Maiko Kobayashi, Gafari Lukumon, Marco Sartorio, Jiong Yang, Oksana Zinchenko,Bahador Bahrami, Jaime Silva,Uri Hertz,Anna Konova, Jian Li, Cathal O'Madagain,Joaquin Navajas, Gabriel Reyes, Atiye Sarabi-Jamab,Anna Shestakova, Bhasi Sukumaran,Katsumi Watanabe,Stefano Palminteri

Research square(2023)

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摘要
Recent evidence indicates that reward value encoding in humans is highly context-dependent, leading to suboptimal decisions in some cases. But whether this computational constraint on valuation is a shared feature of human cognition remains unknown. To address this question, we studied the behavior of individuals from across 11 countries of markedly different socioeconomic and cultural makeup using an experimental approach that reliably captures context effects in reinforcement learning. Our findings show that all samples presented evidence of similar sensitivity to context. Crucially, suboptimal decisions generated by context manipulation were not explained by risk aversion, as estimated through a separate description-based choice task (i.e., lotteries) consisting of matched decision offers. Conversely, risk aversion significantly differed across countries. Overall, our findings suggest that context-dependent reward value encoding is a hardcoded feature of human cognition, while description-based decision-making is significantly sensitive to cultural factors.
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