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Memory-reliant Post-error Slowing Is Associated with Successful Learning and Fronto-occipital Activity
2016
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
■ Negative feedback after an action in a cognitive task can lead to devaluing that action on future trials as well as to more cautious responding when encountering that same choice again. These phenomena have been explored in the past by reinforcement learning theories and cognitive control accounts, respectively. Yet, how cognitive control interacts with value updating to give rise to adequate adaptations under uncertainty is less clear. In this fMRI study, we investigated cognitive
doi:10.1162/jocn_a_00987
pmid:27243614
fatcat:vknes7kapvf63a7eo7nfdg4zku