1 / 16

Dr. Bruce J. West Chief Scientist Mathematical & Information Science Directorate

UNCLASSIFIED / FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY. Decision Making and Stochastic Delay at Workshop on Social Computing, Behavior Modeling and Prediction 1 April 2008. Dr. Bruce J. West Chief Scientist Mathematical & Information Science Directorate Army Research Office Bruce.j.west@us.army.mil

hisano
Télécharger la présentation

Dr. Bruce J. West Chief Scientist Mathematical & Information Science Directorate

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. UNCLASSIFIED / FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Decision Making and Stochastic Delay at Workshop on Social Computing, Behavior Modeling and Prediction 1 April 2008 Dr. Bruce J. West Chief Scientist Mathematical & Information Science Directorate Army Research Office Bruce.j.west@us.army.mil 919-549-4257 UNCLASSIFIED / FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY

  2. Decision Making and Delay Outline of talk • Discounted Utility Model & intertemporal choice • Anomalies from discounted utility theory • irrationality • hyperbolic discounting • Objective and subjective time • entropy and the direction of time • time as a stochastic variable • Individuality and paternalism • some experiments • fit of theory to data • Conclusions

  3. Discounted Utility Model (DUM) Decision Making and Delay • Discount factor δ compresses many mechanisms • mortality, uncertainty, time compression,… • Accepted as both normative (how things should be) and • descriptive (how things are)…..but was initially arbitrary • Samuelson (1937). • Exponential form implies time consistency (rationality)

  4. Anomalies from DUM Decision Making and Delay • Time inconsistency • empirical discount factor is not constant • over time • across type of intertemporal choices • Delay effect (hyperbolic discounting) • Interval effect (non-stationarity) • Sign effect (gains vs. loses) • Magnitude effect (small vs. large) • Direction effect • Sequence effects (ordered set vs. single)

  5. Model comparison Decision Making and Delay • Exponential delay model • monotonic decrease in value with objective time • constant rate results in time consistency • rationality • Hyperbolic delay model • decreasing rate results in time inconsistency • irrationality (preference reversal) hyperbolic exponential exponential hyperbolic hyperbolic exponential

  6. Objective vs. subjective time Decision Making and Delay • Hyperbolic models • Objective time • clockwork universe • entropy and the direction of time • Subjective time • unidirectional • probability and statistics • Motivate decision-making using ensemble distributions • subjective time • stochastic delays

  7. Delay and uncertainty Decision Making and Delay • Decision-making models of intertemporal choice can be extended to incorporate probabilistic choice where p is the probability of reward at time t and F is an unspecified function. discretecontinuous • No reward before delay time t • Delay-time probability density

  8. Decision Making and Delay Stochastic rate • Deterministic discount rate is replaced with a conditional probability per unit time • The ratio of the delay time distribution function to the survival probability density, integrates to • The utility function in terms of subjective time is therefore

  9. Example rate Decision Making and Delay • Rate of reward production suggested by hyperbolic distribution • Probability of no reward before time t is so that the utility function is inverse power law • T measures response time and α measures irrationality

  10. Experimental data Decision Making and Delay • Students (20) asked to make decisions about hypothetical money to be received immediately or at a later time, concerning the subjects themselves or another person not known to them. Takahashi, Physica A (2007). self other T=1.85 α=0.11 T=31 α=0.28

  11. Implications from experiments Decision Making and Delay • The response times could describe paternalistic policy making government officials, where irrationality is enhanced. • Irrationality is nowhere more significant than in the military where choices may determine whether others live or die.

  12. Decision Making and Delay • Nonlinear dynamic equation solved on the interval (0,1). • define a delay-time distribution density • assume a uniform distribution of initial conditions to obtain • delay-time distribution density is non-Poisson, renewal and non-ergodic

  13. Measured discount rates Decision Making and Delay • Higher discount rates compared with controls* ( smaller T and α in stochastic intertemporal model) • smoking • excessive alcohol consumption • illicit drug use (cocaine, crack-cocaine and heroin) • pathological gambling • age • cognitive ability (negative correlation with intellectual achievement) • Consistent with neuroeconomic hypothesis that prefrontal cortex is essential for patient (forward looking) decision making. * Chabris, Laibson & Schuldt, The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (2007).

  14. Brain Activity Decision Making and Delay β network”: midbrain dopamine network; reward processing (ventral striatum V.Str. and medial prefrontal cortex mPFC.) δ network: cognition; dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (diPFC) and right posterior parletal cortex (R.Par.) Sanfey, Loewenstein, McClure and Cohen, TRENDS in Cognitive Science (2006).

  15. Decision Making and Delay More brain activity • Two discounting slopes • < one year • > one year • Different parts of the brain light • up under fMRI • short-term • long-term Wittmann & Paulus (2007)

  16. Decision Making and Delay Conclusions and Speculations • decision-making is not always rational • irrationality in intertemporal choice models take a hyperbolic form • inverse power laws or hyperbolic utility functions can be generated by stochastic delay times • different parts of the brain control decisions associated with long and short delay times • the complexity of the brain produces the subjective nature of biological time

More Related