Reward Associations Magnify Memory-Based Biases on Perception

13 Pages Posted: 22 Apr 2022

See all articles by Sonia Doallo

Sonia Doallo

University of Oxford

Eva Zita Patai

University of Oxford - Department of Experimental Psychology

Anna C Nobre

Yale University; University of Oxford

Date Written: October 01, 2012

Abstract

Long-term spatial contextual memories are a rich source of predictions about the likely locations of relevant objects in the environment and should enable tuning of neural processing of unfolding events to optimize perception and action. Of particular importance is whether and how the reward outcome of past events can impact perception. We combined behavioral measures with recordings of brain activity with high temporal resolution to test whether the previous reward outcome associated with a memory could modulate the impact of memory-based biases on perception, and if so, the level(s) at which visual neural processing is biased by reward-associated memory-guided attention. Data showed that past rewards potentiate the effects of spatial memories upon the discrimination of target objects embedded within complex scenes starting from early perceptual stages. We show that a single reward outcome of learning impacts on how we perceive events in our complex environments.

Suggested Citation

Doallo, Sonia and Patai, Eva Zita and Nobre, Anna C, Reward Associations Magnify Memory-Based Biases on Perception (October 01, 2012). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4066576 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4066576

Sonia Doallo

University of Oxford

Mansfield Road
Oxford, Oxfordshire OX1 4AU
United Kingdom

Eva Zita Patai

University of Oxford - Department of Experimental Psychology

Anna C Nobre (Contact Author)

Yale University ( email )

493 College St
New Haven, CT CT 06520
United States

HOME PAGE: http://brainandcognition.org/

University of Oxford ( email )

Wu Tsai Institute and Psychology Department
Yale University
New Haven, CT 06510
United States

HOME PAGE: http://brainandcognition.org/

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