Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 26
pro vyhledávání: '"Bojana Kuzmanovic"'
Autor:
Shiran Oren, Marc Tittgemeyer, Lionel Rigoux, Marc Schlamann, Tom Schonberg, Bojana Kuzmanovic
Publikováno v:
NeuroImage, Vol 257, Iss , Pp 119335- (2022)
Different types of rewards such as food and money can similarly drive our behavior owing to shared brain processes encoding their subjective value. However, while the value of money is abstract and needs to be learned, the value of food is rooted in
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/ac2413d3fee64acbb3e8756b7f1f26c7
Autor:
Diba Borgmann, Lionel Rigoux, Bojana Kuzmanovic, Sharmili Edwin Thanarajah, Thomas F. Münte, Henning Fenselau, Marc Tittgemeyer
Publikováno v:
NeuroImage, Vol 244, Iss , Pp 118566- (2021)
Our increasing knowledge about gut-brain interaction is revolutionising the understanding of the links between digestion, mood, health, and even decision making in our everyday lives. In support of this interaction, the vagus nerve is a crucial pathw
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/1813300ae0e340a2a3b3b9f423289609
Autor:
Bojana Kuzmanovic, Lionel Rigoux
Publikováno v:
Frontiers in Psychology, Vol 8 (2017)
People tend to update beliefs about their future outcomes in a valence-dependent way: they are likely to incorporate good news and to neglect bad news. However, belief formation is a complex process which depends not only on motivational factors such
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/2ef7d30525e84b1b991fdc9a008d48f1
When given a choice, humans and many animals prefer smaller but sooner over larger but later rewards, a tendency referred to as temporal discounting. Alterations in devaluation of future rewards have been reported in a range of maladaptive behaviors
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::2d5b8611096f733b007999a65ae47a86
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.21.517327
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.21.517327
Autor:
Bojana Kuzmanovic, Marc Tittgemeyer, Thomas F. Münte, Sharmili Edwin Thanarajah, Diba Borgmann, Henning Fenselau, Lionel Rigoux
Publikováno v:
NeuroImage
NeuroImage, Vol 244, Iss, Pp 118566-(2021)
NeuroImage, 244
NeuroImage, Vol 244, Iss, Pp 118566-(2021)
NeuroImage, 244
Our increasing knowledge about gut-brain interaction is revolutionising the understanding of the links between digestion, mood, health, and even decision making in our everyday lives. In support of this interaction, the vagus nerve is a crucial pathw
Publikováno v:
Consciousness and Cognition
Highlights • There are a number of controversial questions regarding the nature and causes of unrealistic optimism. • We argue that unrealistically optimistic cognitions should be considered beliefs rather than desires or hopes. • Optimisticall
Publikováno v:
Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders. 49:2990-2998
Previous research has demonstrated irrational asymmetry in belief updating: people tend to take into account good news and neglect bad news. Contradicting formal learning principles, belief updates were on average larger after better-than-expected in
Publikováno v:
NeuroImage. 133:151-162
People are motivated to adopt the most favorable beliefs about their future because positive beliefs are experienced as rewarding. However, it is so far inconclusive whether brain regions known to represent reward values are involved in the generatio
When updating beliefs about their future prospects, people tend to disregard bad news. By combining fMRI with computational and dynamic causal modeling, we identified neurocircuitry mechanisms underlying this optimism bias to test for valence-guided
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::29bacc2a2bae82f577e35c8c87542a84
https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/158350/
https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/158350/
Publikováno v:
Journal of Behavioral Decision Making. 28:281-293
People learn more from new information when it leads to favorable future outlooks and thus can maintain optimism despite conflicting evidence. In two studies (N=20 and 26), we investigated whether this optimism bias in belief updating is self-specifi