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Dopamine: generalization and bonuses (2002)

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by Sham Kakade , Peter Dayan
Citations:52 - 3 self
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BibTeX

@MISC{Kakade02dopamine:generalization,
    author = {Sham Kakade and Peter Dayan},
    title = { Dopamine: generalization and bonuses},
    year = {2002}
}

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Abstract

In the temporal difference model of primate dopamine neurons, their phasic activity reports a prediction error for future reward. This model is supported by a wealth of experimental data. However, in certain circumstances, the activity of the dopamine cells seems anomalous under the model, as they respond in particular ways to stimuli that are not obviously related to predictions of reward. In this paper, we address two important sets of anomalies, those having to do with generalization and novelty. Generalization responses are treated as the natural consequence of partial information; novelty responses are treated by the suggestion that dopamine cells multiplex information about reward bonuses, including exploration bonuses and shaping bonuses. We interpret this additional role for dopamine in terms of the mechanistic attentional and psychomotor effects of dopamine, having the computational role of guiding exploration.

Keyphrases

special issue dopamine    reward bonus    mechanistic attentional    important set    certain circumstance    partial information    natural consequence    computational role    temporal difference model    dopamine cell multiplex information    phasic activity    future reward    exploration bonus    dopamine cell    additional role    novelty response    generalization response    psychomotor effect    particular way    prediction error    experimental data    elsevier science ltd    primate dopamine neuron   

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