The Computational Development of Reinforcement Learning during Adolescence |
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Authors: | Stefano Palminteri Emma J. Kilford Giorgio Coricelli Sarah-Jayne Blakemore |
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Affiliation: | 1Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London, United Kingdom;2Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitive, École Normale Supérieure, Paris, France;3Interdepartmental Centre for Mind/Brain Sciences, Università degli Studi di Trento, Trento, Italy;4Department of Economics, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United States of America;Oxford University, UNITED KINGDOM |
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Abstract: | Adolescence is a period of life characterised by changes in learning and decision-making. Learning and decision-making do not rely on a unitary system, but instead require the coordination of different cognitive processes that can be mathematically formalised as dissociable computational modules. Here, we aimed to trace the developmental time-course of the computational modules responsible for learning from reward or punishment, and learning from counterfactual feedback. Adolescents and adults carried out a novel reinforcement learning paradigm in which participants learned the association between cues and probabilistic outcomes, where the outcomes differed in valence (reward versus punishment) and feedback was either partial or complete (either the outcome of the chosen option only, or the outcomes of both the chosen and unchosen option, were displayed). Computational strategies changed during development: whereas adolescents’ behaviour was better explained by a basic reinforcement learning algorithm, adults’ behaviour integrated increasingly complex computational features, namely a counterfactual learning module (enabling enhanced performance in the presence of complete feedback) and a value contextualisation module (enabling symmetrical reward and punishment learning). Unlike adults, adolescent performance did not benefit from counterfactual (complete) feedback. In addition, while adults learned symmetrically from both reward and punishment, adolescents learned from reward but were less likely to learn from punishment. This tendency to rely on rewards and not to consider alternative consequences of actions might contribute to our understanding of decision-making in adolescence. |
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