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Regulation of the exploration-exploitation trade-off captures long-term changes in rat behaviour
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  • Francois Cinotti,
  • Etienne Coutureau,
  • Mehdi Khamassi,
  • Alain Marchand,
  • Benoît Girard
Francois Cinotti
University of Reading

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Etienne Coutureau
INCIA, CNRS UMR5287
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Mehdi Khamassi
Institut des Systèmes Intelligents et de Robotique
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Alain Marchand
INCIA
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Benoît Girard
Institut des Systemes Intelligents et de Robotique
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Abstract

In uncertain environments in which resources fluctuate continuously, animals must permanently decide whether to exploit what they currently believe to be their best option, or instead explore potential alternatives in case better opportunities are in fact available. While such a trade-off has been extensively studied in pretrained animals facing non-stationary decision-making tasks, it is yet unknown how they progressively tune it while progressively learning the task structure during pretraining. Here, we compared the ability of different computational models to account for long-term changes in the behaviour of 24 rats while they learned to choose a rewarded lever in a three-armed bandit task across 24 days of pretraining. We found that the day-by-day evolution of rat performance and win-shift tendency revealed a progressive stabilization of the way they regulated the exploration-exploitation trade-off. We successfully captured these behavioural adaptations using a meta-learning model in which the exploration-exploitation trade-off is controlled by the animal's average reward rate.
30 Sep 2023Submitted to European Journal of Neuroscience
03 Oct 2023Assigned to Editor
03 Oct 2023Submission Checks Completed
04 Oct 2023Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
05 Oct 2023Reviewer(s) Assigned
22 Nov 2023Editorial Decision: Revise Major