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The Web-Surf Task: A translational model of human decision-making
Authors:Samantha V Abram  Yannick-André Breton  Brandy Schmidt  A David Redish  III" target="_blank">Angus W MacDonaldIII
Institution:1.Department of Psychology,University of Minnesota,Minneapolis,USA;2.Department of Neuroscience,University of Minnesota,Minneapolis,USA;3.Department of Psychiatry,University of Minnesota,Minneapolis,USA
Abstract:Animal models of decision-making are some of the most highly regarded psychological process models; however, there remains a disconnection between how these models are used for pre-clinical applications and the resulting treatment outcomes. This may be due to untested assumptions that different species recruit the same neural or psychological mechanisms. We propose a novel human foraging paradigm (Web-Surf Task) that we translated from a rat foraging paradigm (Restaurant Row) to evaluate cross-species decision-making similarities. We examined behavioral parallels in human and non-human animals using the respective tasks. We also compared two variants of the human task, one using videos and the other using photos as rewards, by correlating revealed and stated preferences. We demonstrate similarities in choice behaviors and decision reaction times in human and rat subjects. Findings also indicate that videos yielded more reliable and valid results. The joint use of the Web-Surf Task and Restaurant Row is therefore a promising approach for functional translational research, aiming to bridge pre-clinical and clinical lines of research using analogous tasks.
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