From self to others Neural and social perspectives on cue-triggered decision-making
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| Award date | 24-11-2025 |
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| Number of pages | 193 |
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| Abstract |
Predictable, reward-related cues in the environment play a crucial role in guiding behavior and shaping decision-making. Through a series of experiments, this dissertation investigates the role of the motor cortex in cue-triggered decision-making and examines whether the influence of environmental cues on behavior can be transmitted through observation or vicarious reward.
Chapter 1 reviews key theories and findings on environmental cues, the Pavlovian-to-Instrumental Transfer (PIT) paradigm, mirror neuron systems, vicarious transfer and reward, and the use of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and motor-evoked potentials (MEPs). Chapter 2 employs an extended PIT task combined with single-pulse TMS to examine motor cortex activation during cue-triggered decision-making. Results confirm the behavioral influence of cues but indicate that the motor cortex is not directly involved in this process. Chapter 3 summarizes EEG findings from the PIT task and proposes methodological refinements for MEP collection to more accurately capture cue-related motor activity. Chapter 4 implements these refinements, recording MEPs closer to cue onset, replicating earlier behavioral effects, and finding no evidence of direct motor cortex involvement. Chapter 5 introduces a vicarious PIT paradigm, demonstrating that cue-driven behavioral influences can extend to observers through mere observation. Chapter 6 shows that PIT effects persist for rewards delivered to others, remaining insensitive to outcome devaluation but potentially modulated by reward intensity. Chapter 7 synthesizes these findings, highlighting the limited role of the motor cortex in cue-triggered decision-making and the potential for environmental cues to shape behavior socially and vicariously. Limitations and future research directions are also discussed. |
| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Language | English |
| Downloads |
Thesis (complete)
(Embargo up to 2027-05-24)
Chapter 2: The role of motor cortex in cue-triggered decision-making
(Embargo up to 2027-05-24)
Chapter 4: Evidence from the PIT paradigm: Replicating and validating the role of the motor cortex across different time point in the decision-making process
(Embargo up to 2027-05-24)
Chapter 5: Vicarious Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer: Observing other shapes decision-making through environmental cues
(Embargo up to 2027-05-24)
Chapter 6: From self to others: Extending Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer through vicarious reward
(Embargo up to 2027-05-24)
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