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Humans sacrifice decision-making for action execution when a demanding control of movement is required
[article]
2020
bioRxiv
pre-print
A growing body of evidence suggests that decision-making and action execution are governed by partly overlapping operating principles. Especially, previous work proposed that a shared decision urgency/movement vigor signal, possibly computed in the basal ganglia, coordinates both deliberation and movement durations in a way that maximizes reward rate. Recent data support one aspect of this hypothesis, indicating that the urgency level at which a decision is made influences the vigor of the
doi:10.1101/2020.04.08.028936
fatcat:tpye26ojp5cvxhj73ny5sdep7u