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    <title>Valence biases in reinforcement learning shift across adolescence and modulate subsequent
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      <article itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/Article" data-itemscope="root">
        <h1 itemprop="headline">Valence biases in reinforcement learning shift across adolescence
          and modulate subsequent memory</h1>
        <meta itemprop="image"
          content="https://via.placeholder.com/1200x714/dbdbdb/4a4a4a.png?text=Valence%20biases%20in%20reinforcement%20learning%20shift%20across%20adolescence%20and%20modulate%20subsequent%20memory">
        <ol data-itemprop="authors">
          <li itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/Person" itemprop="author">
            <meta itemprop="name" content="Gail M Rosenbaum"><span data-itemprop="givenNames"><span
                itemprop="givenName">Gail</span><span itemprop="givenName">M</span></span><span
              data-itemprop="familyNames"><span itemprop="familyName">Rosenbaum</span></span><span
              data-itemprop="affiliations"><a itemprop="affiliation"
                href="#author-organization-1">1</a></span>
          </li>
          <li itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/Person" itemprop="author">
            <meta itemprop="name" content="Hannah L Grassie"><span data-itemprop="givenNames"><span
                itemprop="givenName">Hannah</span><span itemprop="givenName">L</span></span><span
              data-itemprop="familyNames"><span itemprop="familyName">Grassie</span></span><span
              data-itemprop="affiliations"><a itemprop="affiliation"
                href="#author-organization-1">1</a></span>
          </li>
          <li itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/Person" itemprop="author">
            <meta itemprop="name" content="Catherine A Hartley"><span
              data-itemprop="givenNames"><span itemprop="givenName">Catherine</span><span
                itemprop="givenName">A</span></span><span data-itemprop="familyNames"><span
                itemprop="familyName">Hartley</span></span><span data-itemprop="emails"><a
                itemprop="email" href="mailto:cah369@nyu.edu">cah369@nyu.edu</a></span><span
              data-itemprop="affiliations"><a itemprop="affiliation"
                href="#author-organization-1">1</a><a itemprop="affiliation"
                href="#author-organization-2">2</a></span>
          </li>
        </ol>
        <ol data-itemprop="affiliations">
          <li itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/Organization" itemid="#author-organization-1"
            id="author-organization-1"><span itemprop="name">Department of Psychology, New York
              University</span><address itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/PostalAddress"
              itemprop="address"><span itemprop="addressLocality">New York</span><span
                itemprop="addressCountry">United States</span></address></li>
          <li itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/Organization" itemid="#author-organization-2"
            id="author-organization-2"><span itemprop="name">Center for Neural Science, New York
              University</span><address itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/PostalAddress"
              itemprop="address"><span itemprop="addressLocality">New York</span><span
                itemprop="addressCountry">United States</span></address></li>
        </ol><span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/Organization" itemprop="publisher">
          <meta itemprop="name" content="Unknown"><span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.org/ImageObject" itemprop="logo">
            <meta itemprop="url"
              content="https://via.placeholder.com/600x60/dbdbdb/4a4a4a.png?text=Unknown">
          </span>
        </span><time itemprop="datePublished" datetime="2022-01-24">2022-01-24</time>
        <ul data-itemprop="genre">
          <li itemprop="genre">Research Article</li>
        </ul>
        <ul data-itemprop="about">
          <li itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/DefinedTerm" itemprop="about"><span
              itemprop="name">Neuroscience</span></li>
        </ul>
        <ul data-itemprop="keywords">
          <li itemprop="keywords">valence asymmetries</li>
          <li itemprop="keywords">reinforcement learning</li>
          <li itemprop="keywords">memory</li>
          <li itemprop="keywords">adolescence</li>
          <li itemprop="keywords">decision making</li>
          <li itemprop="keywords">individual diferences</li>
          <li itemprop="keywords">Human</li>
        </ul>
        <ul data-itemprop="identifiers">
          <li itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/PropertyValue" itemprop="identifier">
            <meta itemprop="propertyID"
              content="https://registry.identifiers.org/registry/publisher-id"><span
              itemprop="name">publisher-id</span><span itemprop="value"
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">64620</span>
          </li>
          <li itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/PropertyValue" itemprop="identifier">
            <meta itemprop="propertyID" content="https://registry.identifiers.org/registry/doi">
            <span itemprop="name">doi</span><span itemprop="value">10.7554/eLife.64620</span>
          </li>
          <li itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/PropertyValue" itemprop="identifier">
            <meta itemprop="propertyID"
              content="https://registry.identifiers.org/registry/elocation-id"><span
              itemprop="name">elocation-id</span><span itemprop="value">e64620</span>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <section data-itemprop="description">
          <h2 data-itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading">Abstract</h2>
          <meta itemprop="description"
            content="As individuals learn through trial and error, some are more influenced by good outcomes, while others weight bad outcomes more heavily. Such valence biases may also influence memory for past experiences. Here, we examined whether valence asymmetries in reinforcement learning change across adolescence, and whether individual learning asymmetries bias the content of subsequent memory. Participants ages 8–27 learned the values of ‘point machines,’ after which their memory for trial-unique images presented with choice outcomes was assessed. Relative to children and adults, adolescents overweighted worse-than-expected outcomes during learning. Individuals’ valence biases modulated incidental memory, such that those who prioritized worse- (or better-) than-expected outcomes during learning were also more likely to remember images paired with these outcomes, an effect reproduced in an independent dataset. Collectively, these results highlight age-related changes in the computation of subjective value and demonstrate that a valence-asymmetric valuation process influences how information is prioritized in episodic memory.">
          <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">As individuals learn through
            trial and error, some are more influenced by good outcomes, while others weight bad
            outcomes more heavily. Such valence biases may also influence memory for past
            experiences. Here, we examined whether valence asymmetries in reinforcement learning
            change across adolescence, and whether individual learning asymmetries bias the content
            of subsequent memory. Participants ages 8–27 learned the values of ‘point machines,’
            after which their memory for trial-unique images presented with choice outcomes was
            assessed. Relative to children and adults, adolescents overweighted worse-than-expected
            outcomes during learning. Individuals’ valence biases modulated incidental memory, such
            that those who prioritized worse- (or better-) than-expected outcomes during learning
            were also more likely to remember images paired with these outcomes, an effect
            reproduced in an independent dataset. Collectively, these results highlight age-related
            changes in the computation of subjective value and demonstrate that a valence-asymmetric
            valuation process influences how information is prioritized in episodic memory.</p>
        </section>
        <h2 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="introduction">Introduction
        </h2>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Throughout our lives, we
          encounter many new or uncertain situations in which we must learn, through trial and
          error, which actions are beneficial and which are best avoided. Determining which
          behaviors will earn praise from a teacher, which social media posts will be liked by
          peers, or which route to work will have the least traffic is often accomplished by
          exploring different actions, and learning from the good or bad outcomes that they yield.
          Importantly, individuals differ in the extent to which their evaluations <span
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib27"><span>27</span><span>Daw et
                  al.</span><span>2002</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib35"><span>35</span><span>Frank et
                  al.</span><span>2004</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib41"><span>41</span><span>Gershman</span><span>2015</span></a></cite><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib52"><span>52</span><span>Lefebvre et
                  al.</span><span>2017</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib88"><span>88</span><span>Sharot
                  and Garrett</span><span>2016</span></a></cite></span> and their memories <span
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib57"><span>57</span><span>Madan et
                  al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib58"><span>58</span><span>Madan et
                  al.</span><span>2017</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib83"><span>83</span><span>Rouhani
                  and Niv</span><span>2019</span></a></cite></span> are influenced by good versus
          bad experiences. For example, consider a diner who has a delicious meal on her first visit
          to a new sushi restaurant, but on her next visit, the meal is not very good. A tendency to
          place greater weight on past positive experiences might make her both more likely to
          remember the good dining experience and more likely to return and try the restaurant
          again. In contrast, if the recent negative experience exerts an outsized influence, it may
          be more easily called to mind and she may forego another visit to that restaurant in favor
          of a surer bet. In this manner, asymmetric prioritization of past positive versus negative
          outcomes may render these valenced experiences more persistent in our memories and
          systematically alter how we make future decisions about uncertain prospects.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Understanding how experiential
          learning informs decision-making under uncertainty may be particularly important during
          adolescence, when teens’ burgeoning independence offers more frequent exposure to novel
          contexts in which the potential positive or negative outcomes of an action may be
          uncertain. Epidemiological data reveal an adolescent peak in the prevalence of many
          ‘risky’ behaviors that carry potential negative consequences (e.g., criminal behavior
          <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib93"><span>93</span><span>Steinberg</span><span>2013</span></a></cite>, risky
          sexual behavior <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib85"><span>85</span><span>Satterwhite et
                al.</span><span>2013</span></a></cite>). Moreover, consistent with proposals that
          adolescent risk taking might be driven by heightened sensitivity to rewarding outcomes
          <span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib15"><span>15</span><span>Casey et
                  al.</span><span>2008</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib39"><span>39</span><span>Galván</span><span>2013</span></a></cite><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib89"><span>89</span><span>Silverman et
                  al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib92"><span>92</span><span>Steinberg</span><span>2008</span></a></cite><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib99"><span>99</span><span>Duijvenvoorde et
                  al.</span><span>2017</span></a></cite></span>, several neuroimaging studies have
          observed that adolescents exhibit neural responses to reward that are greater in magnitude
          than those of children or adults <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib12"><span>12</span><span>Braams
                  et al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib23"><span>23</span><span>Cohen et
                  al.</span><span>2010</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib38"><span>38</span><span>Galvan
                  et al.</span><span>2006</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib89"><span>89</span><span>Silverman et
                  al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib100"><span>100</span><span>Van
                  Leijenhorst et al.</span><span>2010</span></a></cite></span>. These findings
          suggest that as adolescents learn to evaluate novel situations through trial and error,
          positive experiences might exert an outsized influence on their subsequent actions and
          choices.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Reinforcement learning (RL)
          models mathematically formalize the process of evaluating actions based on their resulting
          good and bad outcomes <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib94"><span>94</span><span>Sutton and
                Barto</span><span>1998</span></a></cite>. In such models, action value estimates are
          iteratively revised based on prediction errors or the extent to which an experienced
          outcome deviates from one’s current expectation. The magnitude of the resulting value
          update is scaled by an individual’s learning rate. Valence asymmetries in the estimation
          of action values can be captured by positing two distinct learning rates for positive
          versus negative prediction errors, leading to differential adjustment of value estimates
          following outcomes that are better or worse than one’s expectations. Importantly, an RL
          algorithm with such valence-dependent learning rates estimates subjective values in a
          ‘risk-sensitive’ manner <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib61"><span>61</span><span>Mihatsch
                  and Neuneier</span><span>2002</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib67"><span>67</span><span>Niv et
                  al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite></span>. A learner with a greater positive
          than negative learning rate will, across repeated choices, come to assign a greater value
          to a risky prospect (i.e., with variable outcomes) than to a safer choice with equivalent
          expected value (EV) that consistently yields intermediate outcomes, whereas a learner with
          the opposite asymmetry will estimate the risky option as being relatively less valuable.
        </p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Outcomes that violate our
          expectations might also be particularly valuable to remember. Beyond the central role of
          prediction errors in the estimation of action values, these learning signals also appear
          to influence what information is prioritized in episodic memory <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib34"><span>34</span><span>Ergo et
                al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite>. Past studies have demonstrated enhanced
          memory for stimuli presented concurrently with outcomes that elicit positive <span
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib26"><span>26</span><span>Davidow
                  et al.</span><span>2016</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib44"><span>44</span><span>Jang et
                  al.</span><span>2019</span></a></cite></span>, negative <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib47"><span>47</span><span>Kalbe and
                Schwabe</span><span>2020</span></a></cite>, or high-magnitude (independent of
          valence) prediction errors <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib82"><span>82</span><span>Rouhani et al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite>,
          suggesting that prediction errors can facilitate memory encoding and consolidation
          processes. The common role of prediction errors in driving value-based learning and
          facilitating memory may reflect, in part, a tendency to allocate greater attention to
          stimuli that are uncertain <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib28"><span>28</span><span>Dayan et
                  al.</span><span>2000</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib70"><span>70</span><span>Pearce
                  and Hall</span><span>1980</span></a></cite></span>. However, it is unclear whether
          idiosyncratic valence asymmetries in RL computations might give rise to corresponding
          asymmetries in the information that is prioritized for memory. Moreover, while few studies
          have explored the development of these interactive learning systems, a recent empirical
          study observing an effect of prediction errors on recognition memory in adolescents, but
          not adults <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib26"><span>26</span><span>Davidow et al.</span><span>2016</span></a></cite>,
          suggests that the influence of RL signals on memory may be differentially tuned across
          development.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">In the present study, we
          examined whether valence asymmetries in RL change across adolescent development,
          conferring age differences in risk preferences. We additionally hypothesized that
          individuals’ learning asymmetries might asymmetrically bias their memory for images that
          coincide with positive versus negative prediction errors. Several past studies have
          characterized developmental changes in learning from valenced outcomes <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib18"><span>18</span><span>Christakou et
                  al.</span><span>2013</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib42"><span>42</span><span>Hauser
                  et al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib45"><span>45</span><span>Jones et
                  al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib59"><span>59</span><span>Master
                  et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib63"><span>63</span><span>Moutoussis et
                  al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib96"><span>96</span><span>Bos et
                  al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite></span>. However, the probabilistic
          reinforcement structures used in each of these studies demanded that the learner adopt
          specific valence asymmetries during value estimation in order to maximize reward in the
          task <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib68"><span>68</span><span>Nussenbaum and
                Hartley</span><span>2019</span></a></cite>. For instance, in one study, child,
          adolescent, and adult participants were rewarded on 80% of choices for one option and 20%
          of choices for a second option <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib96"><span>96</span><span>Bos et
                al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite>. In this task, a positive learning asymmetry
          yields better performance than a neutral or negative asymmetry <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib68"><span>68</span><span>Nussenbaum
                and Hartley</span><span>2019</span></a></cite>. Indeed, adults exhibited a more
          optimal pattern of learning, with higher positive than negative learning rates, while
          children and adolescents did not <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib96"><span>96</span><span>Bos et
                al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite>. Thus, choice behavior in these studies might
          reflect both potential age differences in the optimality of RL, as well as
          context-independent differences in the weighting of positive versus negative prediction
          errors <span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib16"><span>16</span><span>Cazé and
                  Meer</span><span>2013</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib68"><span>68</span><span>Nussenbaum and
                  Hartley</span><span>2019</span></a></cite></span>.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">In Experiment 1 of the present
          study, we assessed whether valence asymmetries in RL varied from childhood to adulthood,
          using a risk-sensitive RL task <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib67"><span>67</span><span>Niv et
                al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite> in which probabilistic and deterministic
          choice options have equal EV, making no particular learning asymmetry optimal. This
          parameterization allows any biases in the weighting of positive versus negative prediction
          errors to be revealed through subjects’ systematic risk-averse or risk-seeking choice
          behavior. Each choice outcome in the task was associated with a trial-unique image,
          enabling assessment of whether valenced learning asymmetries also biased subsequent memory
          for images that coincided with good or bad outcomes.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">To determine whether this
          hypothesized correspondence between valence biases in learning and memory generalized
          across experimental tasks and samples of different ages, in Experiment 2, we conducted a
          reanalysis of data from a previous study <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib82"><span>82</span><span>Rouhani et
                al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite>. In this study, a group of adults completed a
          task in which they reported value estimates for a series of images, and later completed a
          memory test for the images they encountered during learning. The original manuscript
          reported that subsequent memory varied as a function of PE magnitude, but not valence.
          Here, we tested whether a valence-dependent effect of PE on memory might be evident after
          accounting for idiosyncratic valence biases in learning.</p>
        <h2 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="results">Results</h2>
        <h3 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="experiment-1">Experiment 1
        </h3>
        <figure itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Figure"
          title="Load libraries and functions"><label data-itemprop="label">Load libraries and
            functions</label>
          <stencila-code-chunk itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeChunk"
            data-include="FALSE" data-programminglanguage="r">
            <pre class="language-r" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeBlock"
              slot="text"><code>source(&quot;twolines.R&quot;)  

#this &quot;two lines&quot; approach was introduced by Simonsohn (2017), and helps us better understand quadratic patterns. Simonsohn argues that a quadratic pattern can have many shapes but to argue that something is u-shaped, we should be able to fit two regression lines to the data with a breakpoint between the two, and the two lines should have significant opposite-signed slopes

library(knitr)
library(tidyverse)
library(pander)
library(lme4)
library(lmerTest)
library(sjPlot)
library(dplyr)
library(car)
library(gridExtra)
library(reshape2)
library(ggpubr)
library(ggeffects)
library(here)
library(GGally)
library(emmeans)
library(sjmisc)
library(sjstats)
library(r2glmm)
library(effectsize)
library(plotrix)
library(gtable)
library(psych)
library(np)
library(ordinal)
library(formattable)
library(grid)

#reporting regression results

#These functions output statistics, including effect sizes, for each type of 
#statistical test I report for display in html report created using knitr.

lmReport &lt;- function(model) {
    cat(tab_model(model, show.stat = TRUE,
                         show.df = TRUE, string.stat = &quot;t&quot;,
                         col.order = c(&quot;est&quot;, &quot;ci&quot;,
                                       &quot;stat&quot;,&quot;df.error&quot;,&quot;p&quot;))$knitr,&quot;\n--------\n&quot;)

    ftab &lt;- effectsize::cohens_f(model, ci = .95)
    #square and round2 the parameter columns
    ftab[,2] &lt;- round2(ftab[,2]^2,2)
    ftab[,4] &lt;- round2(ftab[,4]^2,2)
    ftab[,5] &lt;- round2(ftab[,5]^2,2)
    colnames(ftab) &lt;- c(&quot;Parameter&quot;,&quot;Cohensf2Partial&quot;,
                        &quot;f2_CI&quot;,&quot;f2_CI_low&quot;,&quot;f2_CI_high&quot;)
    return(ftab)
}

lmerReport &lt;- function(model) {
    cat(tab_model(model, show.stat = TRUE,
                           show.df = TRUE, string.stat = &quot;t&quot;,
                           col.order = c(&quot;stat&quot;,&quot;df.error&quot;,&quot;p&quot;,
                                         &quot;est&quot;, &quot;ci&quot;))$knitr,&quot;\n--------\n&quot;)
}

glmerReport &lt;- function(model) {
    cat(tab_model(model, show.stat = TRUE, 
                           show.df = TRUE, string.stat = &quot;z&quot;,
                           col.order = c(&quot;stat&quot;,&quot;p&quot;,&quot;est&quot;, &quot;ci&quot;))$knitr,&quot;\n--------\n&quot;)
}


## Custom round function
# Function to always round 0.5 up
round2 &lt;- function(x, digits = 0) {  
  posneg &lt;- sign(x)
  z &lt;- abs(x) * 10^digits
  z &lt;- z + 0.5
  z &lt;- trunc(z)
  z &lt;- z / 10^digits
  z * posneg
}

## Function to compute BIC from AIC, nobs, nparams
compBIC &lt;- function(AIC,nobs,nparams) {
    loglik &lt;- (AIC - 2*nparams)/2
    BIC &lt;- (2*loglik) + (nparams*log(nobs))
}
</code></pre>
          </stencila-code-chunk>
        </figure>
        <figure itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Figure"
          title="Load experiment 1 data"><label data-itemprop="label">Load experiment 1 data</label>
          <stencila-code-chunk itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeChunk"
            data-include="FALSE" data-programminglanguage="r">
            <pre class="language-r" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeBlock"
              slot="text"><code>### Wide Files - one row per sub, not trial by trial ###
widedf &lt;- read_csv(&quot;data_Exp1/widedf.csv&quot;)

#setting mean and sd age to use below because this isn&#39;t affected by other variables like number of trials, etc.
meanage &lt;- mean(widedf$Age)
sdage &lt;- sd(widedf$Age)
#z-score age
widedf$Age_Z &lt;-(widedf$Age-meanage)/sdage

#model parameters
newModParams &lt;- read_csv(&quot;data_Exp1/BestFitParams.csv&quot;)
newModParams$Age_Z &lt;-(newModParams$Age-meanage)/sdage

### Long - trial-by-trial info derived from TDRS models  ###
#Load the long file with trial-by-trial memory performance and compute relevant variables
MemDF &lt;- read_csv(here(&quot;data_Exp1&quot;,&quot;MemDF.csv&quot;))

#z-score age
MemDF$Age_Z &lt;-(MemDF$Age-meanage)/sdage

#dummy coding for forced trials
MemDF$Forced &lt;- factor(ifelse(MemDF$TrialType == 2, 1, 0))

#dummy coding for equalEV risks
MemDF$EqEVRiskTrial &lt;- factor(ifelse(MemDF$FullTrialType==1 | 
                                         MemDF$FullTrialType==3, 1, 0))

#dummy coding for unequalEV risks
MemDF$UnEqEVRiskTrial &lt;- factor(ifelse(MemDF$FullTrialType == 2, 1, 0))

#dummy coding for testTrials
MemDF$Test &lt;- factor(ifelse(MemDF$TrialType == 3, 1, 0))

#dummy coding for equal vs unequal EV risky trials
MemDF$EqvsUnEqEVRiskTrial &lt;- ifelse(MemDF$FullTrialType==1, 1, 
                                    ifelse(MemDF$FullTrialType==3, 1,
                                           ifelse(MemDF$FullTrialType==2, 
                                                  2, NaN)))

#dummy coding for equal vs unequal EV risky trials
MemDF$TrialTypeContrast &lt;- factor(
    ifelse(MemDF$FullTrialType==1, 1, 
           ifelse(MemDF$FullTrialType==3, 1, 
                  ifelse(MemDF$FullTrialType==2, 2, 
                         ifelse(MemDF$TrialType==2, 3, 
                                ifelse(MemDF$TrialType==3, 4, NaN))))),
    levels = c(&quot;1&quot;,&quot;2&quot;,&quot;3&quot;,&quot;4&quot;), 
    labels = c(&quot;EqEVRisk&quot;, &quot;UnEqEvRisk&quot;,&quot;Forced&quot;,&quot;Test&quot;))

#Get the EV difference between machines for each problem
EVDiffTable &lt;- read_csv(here(&quot;data_Exp1&quot;, &quot;MachineEVs.csv&quot;))

MemDF$EVDiff &lt;- NA
MemDF$EVDiff &lt;-  as.numeric(unlist(EVDiffTable[MemDF$FullTrialType,6]))
MemDF$EVDiffScale &lt;-  scale(MemDF$EVDiff)
rm(EVDiffTable)


#Centering/scaling the memory trial index (when in the memory test a picture 
#was presented)
MemDF$MemIdxScaled &lt;- scale(MemDF$MemIdx)

#make PositiveRPE a factor
MemDF$PositiveRPE &lt;-factor(MemDF$PositiveRPE,
                         levels = c(0,1),
                         labels = c(&quot;Negative Prediction Error&quot;,
                                    &quot;Positive Prediction Error&quot;))

#compute AI
MemDF$AsymmIdx &lt;- (MemDF$AlphaPos-MemDF$AlphaNeg)/(MemDF$AlphaPos+MemDF$AlphaNeg)

#Unscaled Trial - created this after already creating analyses below that call 
#on trialnum
MemDF$TrialUnscaled &lt;- MemDF$TrialNum

#rescaling trial numbers
MemDF$TrialNum &lt;- scale(MemDF$TrialNum)

#make block variable with 3 blocks
MemDF$Block &lt;- ifelse(MemDF$TrialUnscaled&lt;62, 1, 
                      ifelse(MemDF$TrialUnscaled&lt;123, 2, 3))

#make block variable with 6 blocks
MemDF$Block2 &lt;- ifelse(MemDF$TrialUnscaled&lt;31, 1, 
                       ifelse(MemDF$TrialUnscaled&lt;62, 2, 
                              ifelse(MemDF$TrialUnscaled&lt;92, 3,
                                     ifelse(MemDF$TrialUnscaled&lt;123, 4,
                                            ifelse(MemDF$TrialUnscaled&lt;153, 
                                                   5, 6)))))


### Utility data

MemDF_Util &lt;- read_csv(here(&quot;data_Exp1&quot;, &quot;MemDF_Util.csv&quot;))

#z-score age
MemDF_Util$Age_Z &lt;-(MemDF_Util$Age-meanage)/sdage

#dummy coding for forced trials
MemDF_Util$Forced &lt;- factor(ifelse(MemDF_Util$TrialType == 2, 1, 0))

#dummy coding for equalEV risks
MemDF_Util$EqEVRiskTrial &lt;- factor(
    ifelse(MemDF_Util$FullTrialType==1 | 
               MemDF_Util$FullTrialType==3, 1, 0))

#dummy coding for unequalEV risks
MemDF_Util$UnEqEVRiskTrial &lt;- factor(
    ifelse(MemDF_Util$FullTrialType == 2, 1, 0))

#dummy coding for testTrials
MemDF_Util$Test &lt;- factor(ifelse(MemDF_Util$TrialType == 3, 1, 0))

#dummy coding for equal vs unequal EV risky trials
MemDF_Util$EqvsUnEqEVRiskTrial &lt;- 
    ifelse(MemDF_Util$FullTrialType==1, 1, 
           ifelse(MemDF_Util$FullTrialType==3, 1, 
                  ifelse(MemDF_Util$FullTrialType==2, 2, NaN)))

#dummy coding for equal vs unequal EV risky trials
MemDF_Util$TrialTypeContrast &lt;- factor(
    ifelse(MemDF_Util$FullTrialType==1, 1, 
           ifelse(MemDF_Util$FullTrialType==3, 1, 
                  ifelse(MemDF_Util$FullTrialType==2, 2, 
                         ifelse(MemDF_Util$TrialType==2, 3, 
                                ifelse(MemDF_Util$TrialType==3, 4, NaN))))),
    levels = c(&quot;1&quot;,&quot;2&quot;,&quot;3&quot;,&quot;4&quot;), 
    labels = c(&quot;EqEVRisk&quot;, &quot;UnEqEvRisk&quot;,&quot;Forced&quot;,&quot;Test&quot;))


#Get the EV difference between machines for each problem
EVDiffTable &lt;- read_csv(here(&quot;data_Exp1&quot;, &quot;MachineEVs.csv&quot;))

MemDF_Util$EVDiff &lt;- NA
MemDF_Util$EVDiff &lt;-  as.numeric(
    unlist(EVDiffTable[MemDF_Util$FullTrialType,6]))
MemDF_Util$EVDiffScale &lt;-  scale(MemDF_Util$EVDiff)
rm(EVDiffTable)


#Centering/scaling the memory trial index (when in the memory test a picture was presented)
MemDF_Util$MemIdxScaled &lt;- scale(MemDF_Util$MemIdx)

#make RositiveRPE a factor
MemDF_Util$PositiveRPE &lt;-factor(MemDF_Util$PositiveRPE,
                                levels = c(0,1),
                                labels = c(&quot;Negative Prediction Error&quot;,
                                           &quot;Positive Prediction Error&quot;))


#Unscaled Trial - created this after already creating analyses below that call on trialnum
MemDF_Util$TrialUnscaled &lt;- MemDF_Util$TrialNum

#rescaling trial numbers
MemDF_Util$TrialNum &lt;- scale(MemDF_Util$TrialNum)

#make block variable with 3 blocks
MemDF_Util$Block &lt;- ifelse(MemDF_Util$TrialUnscaled&lt;62, 1, ifelse(MemDF_Util$TrialUnscaled&lt;123, 2, 3))

#make block variable with 6 blocks
MemDF_Util$Block2 &lt;- ifelse(
    MemDF_Util$TrialUnscaled&lt;31, 1, 
    ifelse(MemDF_Util$TrialUnscaled&lt;62, 2,
           ifelse(MemDF_Util$TrialUnscaled&lt;92, 3, 
                  ifelse(MemDF_Util$TrialUnscaled&lt;123, 4,
                         ifelse(MemDF_Util$TrialUnscaled&lt;153, 5, 6)))))



###Posterior predictive check data for RSTD
PPC &lt;- read_csv(here(&quot;data_Exp1&quot;,&quot;PPC_RSTD.csv&quot;))
#Keeping this separate because the parameters have the same names as those in 
#widedf but are based on simulations. don&#39;t want to deal with renaming all of them
PPC$Age_Z &lt;- scale(PPC$Age)

# PPC data for Utility
PPC_Util &lt;- read_csv(here(&quot;data_Exp1&quot;,&quot;PPC_Util.csv&quot;))

PPC_Util$Age_Z &lt;- scale(PPC_Util$Age)

TDRecovDF &lt;- read_csv(here(&quot;data_Exp1&quot;, &#39;ModelRecov_TD.csv&#39;))
TDRSRecovDF &lt;- read_csv(here(&quot;data_Exp1&quot;, &#39;ModelRecov_RSTD.csv&#39;))
UtilRecovDF &lt;- read_csv(here(&quot;data_Exp1&quot;, &#39;ModelRecov_Util.csv&#39;))
FourLRRecovDF &lt;- read_csv(here(&quot;data_Exp1&quot;, &#39;ModelRecov_FourLR.csv&#39;))

</code></pre>
          </stencila-code-chunk>
        </figure>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Participants (N =
          <stencila-code-expression programming-language="r" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeExpression"><code class="r"
              slot="text">nrow(widedf)</code><output slot="output"></output>
          </stencila-code-expression>) ages <stencila-code-expression programming-language="r"
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeExpression"><code class="r"
              slot="text">min(widedf$Age)</code><output slot="output"></output>
          </stencila-code-expression><stencila-code-expression programming-language="r"
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeExpression"><code class="r"
              slot="text">max(widedf$Age)</code><output slot="output"></output>
          </stencila-code-expression> (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">M</em> = <stencila-code-expression
            programming-language="r" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeExpression">
            <code class="r" slot="text">round2(meanage,2)</code><output slot="output"></output>
          </stencila-code-expression>, SD = <stencila-code-expression programming-language="r"
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeExpression"><code class="r"
              slot="text">round2(sdage,2)</code><output slot="output"></output>
          </stencila-code-expression>) completed a risk-sensitive RL task <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib67"><span>67</span><span>Niv et
                al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite>. In this task, participants learned, through
          trial and error, the values and probabilities associated with probabilistic and
          deterministic ‘point machines’ (<a href="#fig1" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 1A and B</a>). On each trial (183
          trials), participants made a free (two-choice options) or forced (single-choice option)
          selection of a point machine. Within free-choice trials, ‘risky’ trials presented a pair
          consisting of one probabilistic and one deterministic option, where neither option
          strictly dominated the other and evidence of individuals’ subjective values was revealed
          by their choices. On ‘test’ trials, in which one option dominated the other, we could
          assess objectively the accuracy of participants’ learning. We presented feedback (number
          of points) from each choice on a ‘ticket’ that also displayed a trial-unique picture of an
          object. A subsequent memory test allowed us to explore the interaction between choice
          outcomes and memory encoding across age (<a href="#fig1" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 1C</a>).</p>
        <figure itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Figure" id="fig1" title="Figure 1.">
          <label data-itemprop="label">Figure 1.</label><img src="index.html.media/fig1.jpg" alt=""
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/ImageObject">
          <figcaption>
            <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="task-structure">Task
              structure.</h4>
            <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">(<strong itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Strong">A</strong>) Schematic of the structure of
              a trial in the risk-sensitive reinforcement learning task. (<strong itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Strong">B</strong>) The probabilities and point
              values associated with each of five ‘point machines’ (colors were counterbalanced).
              (<strong itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Strong">C</strong>) Example
              memory trial.</p>
          </figcaption>
        </figure>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="test-trial-performance">Test
          trial performance</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">To ensure that participants
          learned the probabilities and outcomes associated with each machine, we first examined
          performance on test trials, in which one option dominated the other. Test trial accuracy
          significantly improved across the task (generalized linear mixed-effects model: <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 8.56, p&lt;0.001, OR =
          2.03, 95% CI [1.72, 2.38]), with accuracy improving from a mean of 0.63 in the first block
          to means of 0.80 and 0.84 in blocks 2 and 3, respectively. There was no main effect of age
          (<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 0.51, p=0.612, OR =
          1.06, 95% CI [0.86, 1.30]) or interaction between age and trial number (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 0.22, p=0.830, OR <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">=</em> 1.02, 95% CI [0.87, 1.19]; <a
            href="#app1fig1" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure
            1A</a>). These results suggest that accuracy on this coarse measure of value learning
          did not change with age in our task.</p>
        <figure itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Figure" title="WASIByAge"><label
            data-itemprop="label">WASIByAge</label>
          <stencila-code-chunk itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeChunk"
            data-programminglanguage="r">
            <pre class="language-r" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeBlock"
              slot="text"><code>print(&#39;Is there a relationship between age and WASI?&#39;)
WASIage &lt;- lm(WASI~Age_Z, data = widedf)
lmReport(WASIage)

WASIagesq &lt;- lm(WASI~Age_Z + I(Age_Z^2), data = widedf)
lmReport(WASIagesq)

print(&#39;There is no relationship between WASI and linear or quadratic age&#39;)
</code></pre>
          </stencila-code-chunk>
        </figure>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="explicit-reports">Explicit
          reports</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Following the learning task, we
          probed participants’ explicit knowledge about the point machines. Consistent with
          participants’ high accuracy on test trials, accuracy was also high on participants’
          reports of whether each point machine was probabilistic or deterministic (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">M</em> = 0.85) and for the point values
          associated with each machine (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">M</em> = 0.84). Linear regressions suggested
          that performance on these explicit accuracy metrics did not vary with linear age
          (probabilistic/deterministic response accuracy by age: <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = –0.02, 95% CI [–0.06, 0.03], <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(60) = –0.88, p=0.382,
          <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.01, 95% CI [0, 0.13];
          point value response accuracy by age: <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = 0.02, 95% CI [–0.04, 0.07], <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(60) = 0.65, p=0.516, <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.01, 95% CI [0, 0.11]).</p>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="response-time">Response time
        </h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">We explored whether response
          time (RT) varied with age during the learning task. We found a significant interaction
          between age and trial number (linear mixed-effects model: <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(11279) = –2.10, p=0.036, <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = –0.02, 95% CI [–0.04,
          0]) predicting log-transformed RT. Although RT did not differ by age early in the
          experiment, older participants responded faster than younger participants by the end of
          the experiment.</p>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="decision-making">
          Decision-making</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Importantly, in our task, there
          were two pairs of machines in which both probabilistic and deterministic options yielded
          the same EV (i.e., 100% 20 points and 50/50% 0/40 points; 100% 40 points and 50/50% 0/80
          points). A primary goal of this study was to examine participants’ tendency to choose
          probabilistic versus deterministic machines when EV was equivalent. On these equal-EV risk
          trials, participants chose the probabilistic option on 37% of trials (SD = 21%). This
          value was significantly lower than 50% (one-sample <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>-test: <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(61) = 4.87, p&lt;0.001, <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">d</em> = 0.62, 95% CI [0.37,
          0.95]), suggesting that, despite exhibiting heterogeneity in risk preferences,
          participants as a group were generally risk averse.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Next, we tested whether choices
          of the probabilistic machines, compared to choices for equal-EV deterministic machines,
          changed with age. The best-fitting model included both linear and quadratic age terms (<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">F</em>(1,59) = 4.58, p=0.036),
          indicating that risk taking changed nonlinearly with age. Contrary to our hypothesis that
          risk-seeking choices would be highest in adolescents, we observed a significant quadratic
          effect of age, such that adolescents chose the probabilistic options less often than
          children or adults (quadratic age effect in a linear regression including both linear and
          quadratic age terms: <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> =
          0.06, 95% CI [0, 0.12], <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(59) = 2.14, p=0.036, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.08, 95% CI [0, 0.29]; <a
            href="#fig2" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 2</a>; see <a
            href="#app1fig1" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure
            1</a> for plots depicting risk taking across the task as a function of age). The linear
          effect of age was not significant (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = –0.01, 95% CI [–0.06, 0.12], <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(59) = –0.44, p=0.662,
          <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.01, 95% CI [0, 0.11]). We
          also conducted a regression using the two-lines approach <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib90"><span>90</span><span>Simonsohn</span><span>2018</span></a></cite> and
          found a significant u-shaped pattern of risk taking with age, where the proportion of
          probabilistic choices decreased from age 8–16.45 (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = –0.03, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = –1.97, p=0.048) and increased from
          age 16.45–27 (<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = 0.02,
          <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 1.98, p=0.048). Age
          patterns were qualitatively similar when considering the subset of trials in which
          participants faced choice options with unequal EV (i.e., the 0/80 point machine vs. the
          safe 20 point machine; see Appendix 1 and <a href="#app1fig2" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure 2</a> for full results).</p>
        <figure itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Figure" id="fig2" title="Figure 2.">
          <label data-itemprop="label">Figure 2.</label>
          <stencila-code-chunk itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeChunk"
            data-programminglanguage="r">
            <pre class="language-r" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CodeBlock"
              slot="text"><code>ggplot(data=widedf, aes(x=Age, y=MeanRiskOverallEqEV)) + 
    geom_point() +
    stat_smooth(method=lm,formula = y ~ x + I(x^2),se=TRUE,color=&quot;black&quot;) +
    scale_y_continuous(breaks=c(0,.25,.5,.75,1), 
                       labels = c(&quot;0%&quot;,&quot;25%&quot;,&quot;50%&quot;,&quot;75%&quot;,&quot;100%&quot;),
                       limits = c(0, 1)) +
    ylab(&quot;Percent Probabilistic Choices \nEqual-EV Trials&quot;) +
    geom_hline(yintercept=0.5, linetype=&quot;dashed&quot;) +
    theme_bw() + 
    theme(text=element_text(family=&quot;sans&quot;,size=16),
          panel.grid.major = element_blank(),
          panel.grid.minor = element_blank())</code></pre>
          </stencila-code-chunk>
          <figcaption>
            <h5 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
              id="probabilistic-choices-by-age">Probabilistic choices by age.</h5>
            <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Probabilistic (i.e., risky)
              choices by age on trials in which the risky and safe machines had equal expected value
              (EV). Data points depict the mean percentage of trials where each participant selected
              the probabilistic choice option as a function of age. The regression line is from a
              linear regression including linear and quadratic age terms (significant quadratic
              effect of age: <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> =
              0.06, 95% CI [0, 0.12], <em itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(59) = 2.14, p=0.036, <em
                itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = .08, 95% CI [0, 0.29], N
              = 62). Shaded region represents 95% CIs for estimates.</p>
          </figcaption>
        </figure>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
          id="reinforcement-learning-modeling">Reinforcement learning modeling</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">To better understand the
          learning processes underlying individuals’ decision-making, we compared the fit of four RL
          models to participants’ choice behavior. The first was a temporal difference (TD) model
          with one learning rate (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em>). The second was a risk-sensitive
          temporal difference (RSTD) model with separate learning rates for better-than-expected
          (<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup>) and worse-than-expected (<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup>) outcomes, allowing us to index
          valence biases in learning. The third model included four learning rates (FourLR), with
          separate <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> and <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α<sup itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup></em> for free and forced
          choices, as past studies have found learning may differ as a function of agency <span
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib17"><span>17</span><span>Chambon
                  et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib21"><span>21</span><span>Cockburn
                  et al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite></span>. Finally, the fourth model was a
          Utility model, which transforms outcome values into utilities with an exponential
          subjective utility function with a free parameter (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">ρ</em>) capturing individual risk
          preferences <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib72"><span>72</span><span>Pratt</span><span>1964</span></a></cite>, updated
          value estimates using a single learning rate. For all models, machine values were
          transformed to range from 0 to 1, and values were initialized at 0.5 (equivalent to 40
          points). A softmax function with an additional parameter <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">β</em> was used to convert the relative
          estimated values of the two machines into a probability of choosing each machine presented
          for maximum likelihood estimation.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">The RSTD (median Bayesian
          information criterion (BIC) = 131.93) and Utility (median BIC = 131.06) models both
          provided a better fit to participants’ choice data than both the TD (median BIC = 145.35)
          and FourLR (median BIC = 141.25) models (<a href="#app1fig5" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure 5</a>). Assessment of whether
          the RSTD or Utility model provided the best fit to participants’ data was equivocal. At
          the group level, median ΔBIC was 0.87, while at the subject level, the median ΔBIC was
          0.33. Thus, neither ΔBIC metric provides clear evidence in favor of either model (ΔBIC
          &gt; 6 ; <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib77"><span>77</span><span>Raftery</span><span>1995</span></a></cite>).</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">To further arbitrate between
          the RSTD and Utility models, we ran posterior predictive checks and confirmed that
          simulations from both models generated using subjects’ fit parameter values yielded choice
          behavior that exhibited strong correspondence to the real participant data (see <a
            href="#app1fig9" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure
            9</a>). However, data simulated from the RSTD model exhibited a significantly stronger
          correlation with actual choices (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">r</em> = 0.92) than those simulated using
          the Utility model (<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">r</em> =
          0.89; <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(61) = 2.58,
          p=0.012). Because the RSTD model fit choice data approximately as well as the Utility
          model, provided a significantly better qualitative fit to the choice data, and yielded an
          index of valence biases in learning, we focused our remaining analyses on the RSTD model
          (see Appendix 1 for additional model comparison analyses and for an examination of the
          relation between the Utility model and subsequent memory data).</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">We computed an asymmetry index
          (AI) for each participant, which reflects the relative size of <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> and <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup>, from the RSTD model. Mean AI was
          –0.22 (SD = 0.50). Mirroring the age patterns observed in risk taking, a linear regression
          model with a quadratic age term fit better than the model with only linear age (<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">F</em>(1,59) = 5.88, p=0.018),
          and there was a significant quadratic age pattern in AI (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = 0.17, 95% CI [0.03, 0.31], <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(59) = 2.43, p=0.018, <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.10, 95% CI [0, 0.33]; <a
            href="#fig3" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 3</a>).
          Further, the u-shaped relationship between AI and age was significant, with a decrease in
          AI from ages 8–17 (<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> =
          –0.08, <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = –3.82,
          p&lt;0.001), and an increase from ages 17–27 (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = 0.05, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 2.17, p=0.030). This pattern was
          driven primarily by age-related changes in <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup>, which was greater in adolescents
          relative to children and adults (better fit for linear regression including quadratic
          term: <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">F</em>(1,59) = 9.04,
          p=0.004; quadratic age: <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = –0.09, 95% CI [–0.16, –0.03], <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(59) = –3.01, p=0.004,
          <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.15, 95% CI [0.02, 0.43];
          <a href="#app1fig10" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix
            1—figure 10B</a>). According to the two-lines approach, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup> significantly increased from ages
          8–18 (<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = 0.04, <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 3.24, p=0.001) and
          decreased from ages 18–27 (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = –0.04, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = –3.57, p&lt;0.001). Conversely,
          there were no linear or quadratic effects of age for <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> (all <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">p_s&gt;0.24; <a href="#app1fig10"
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure 10A</a>).
            Finally, there were no significant linear or quadratic age patterns in the </em>β_
          parameter (_p_s&gt;.15, see Appendix 1 for full results; <a href="#app1fig10" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure 10C</a>).</p>
        <figure itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Figure" id="fig3" title="Figure 3.">
          <label data-itemprop="label">Figure 3.</label><img src="index.html.media/fig3.jpg" alt=""
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/ImageObject">
          <figcaption>
            <h5 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
              id="asymmetry-index-ai-by-age">Asymmetry index (AI) by age.</h5>
            <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">The regression line is from
              a linear regression model including linear and quadratic age terms (<em itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = 0.17, 95% CI [0.03, 0.31], <em
                itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(59) = 2.43, p=0.018,
              <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.10, 95% CI [0, 0.33],
              N = 62). Data points represent individual participants. Shaded region represents 95%
              CIs for estimates.</p>
          </figcaption>
        </figure>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Prior work has found that
          valence biases tend to be positive in free choices, but neutral or negative in forced
          choices <span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib17"><span>17</span><span>Chambon
                  et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib21"><span>21</span><span>Cockburn
                  et al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite></span>. While model comparison indicated
          that the FourLR model did not provide the best account of participants&#39; learning
          process, we nonetheless conducted an exploratory analysis in which we used parameter
          estimates from the FourLR model to test whether learning asymmetries varied as a function
          of agency in our study. While the <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em>+ and AI were both higher for free
          compared to forced trials, median AIs were negative for both free and forced choices (see
          Appendix 1 for full results; <a href="#app1fig12" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure 12</a>).</p>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="memory-performance">Memory
          performance</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Next, we examined accuracy
          during the surprise memory test for images that were presented with choice outcomes.
          Participants correctly identified 54% (SD = 14%) of images presented alongside choice
          feedback (i.e., Hits) and incorrectly indicated that 24% (SD = 15%) of foil images had
          been presented during the choice task (False Alarms). Mean <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">d</em>′ was 0.93 (SD = 0.48). Hit rate did
          not significantly change with linear or quadratic age (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">p_s&gt;0.14). However, false alarm rate
            significantly increased with linear age (linear regression: _b</em> = 0.04, 95% CI
          [0.00; 0.08], <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(60) =
          2.14, p=0.037, <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.08, 95% CI [0, 0.28]; <a
            href="#app1fig3" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure
            3A</a>). There was a marginal linear decrease in <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">d′</em> with age (linear regression: <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = –0.11, 95% CI [–0.23,
          0.01], <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(60) = 1.84,
          p=0.070, <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.06, 95% CI [0, 0.24]; <a
            href="#app1fig3" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure
            3B</a>), suggesting that adults performed slightly worse on the memory test than younger
          participants.</p>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
          id="influence-of-choice-context-on-memory">Influence of choice context on memory</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">We next tested whether the
          decision context in which images were presented influenced memory encoding. To explore
          this possibility, we first tested whether participants preferentially remembered images
          presented with outcomes of probabilistic versus deterministic machines. Participants were
          significantly more likely to remember pictures presented following a choice that yielded
          probabilistic rather than deterministic outcomes (probabilistic: <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">M</em> = 0.56, SD = 0.15; deterministic: <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">M =</em> 0.52, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">SD =</em> 0.15; <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(61) = 3.08, p=0.003, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">d</em> = 0.39, 95% CI [0.13, 0.65]). This
          result suggests that pictures were better remembered when they followed the choice of a
          machine that consistently generated prediction errors (PEs), which may reflect
          preferential allocation of attention toward outcomes of uncertain choices <span
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib28"><span>28</span><span>Dayan et
                  al.</span><span>2000</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib70"><span>70</span><span>Pearce
                  and Hall</span><span>1980</span></a></cite></span>.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Next, we explored whether
          valence biases in learning could account for individual variability in subsequent memory.
          In theory, larger-magnitude PEs provide stronger learning signals. Thus, we hypothesized
          that participants would have better memory for items coinciding with larger PEs. We also
          expected that this effect might differ as a function of idiosyncratic valence biases, with
          participants preferentially remembering items coinciding with signed PEs where the sign
          was consistent with the valence bias of their AI. Of note, this model did not explicitly
          include a variable indicating whether outcomes followed probabilistic or deterministic
          choices. Rather, whether the choice was probabilistic or deterministic was reflected in
          the PE magnitude variable, which was typically higher for probabilistic choices. In a
          generalized linear mixed-effects model, we predicted memory accuracy as a function of AI,
          PE valence, PE magnitude, and their interaction. We also tested for effects of linear and
          quadratic age, false alarm rate, as a measure of participants’ tendency to generally deem
          items as old, and trial number in the memory task, to account for fatigue as the task
          progressed (<a href="#fig4" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure
            4A</a>). We had no a priori hypothesis about how any effect of valence bias on memory
          might interact with participants’ confidence in their ‘old’ and ‘new’ judgments.
          Therefore, consistent with prior research examining memory accuracy (e.g., <cite
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib33"><span>33</span><span>Dunsmoor et al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite>;
          <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib65"><span>65</span><span>Murty et al.</span><span>2016</span></a></cite>),
          we collapsed across ‘definitely’ and ‘maybe’ confidence ratings for our primary analysis
          (but see Appendix 1 for an exploratory ordinal regression analysis).</p>
        <figure itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Figure" id="fig4" title="Figure 4.">
          <label data-itemprop="label">Figure 4.</label><img src="index.html.media/fig4.jpg" alt=""
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/ImageObject">
          <figcaption>
            <h5 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
              id="the-relation-between-valence-biases-in-learning-and-incidental-memory-for-pictures-presented-with-choice-outcomes-experiment-1">
              The relation between valence biases in learning and incidental memory for pictures
              presented with choice outcomes (Experiment 1).</h5>
            <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">(<strong itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Strong">A</strong>) Results from generalized
              mixed-effects regression depicting fixed effects on memory accuracy. Whiskers
              represent 95% CI. (<strong itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Strong">B</strong>) Estimated marginal means plot
              showing the three-way interaction between AI, PE valence, and PE magnitude (<em
                itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 3.45, p=0.001, OR
              = 1.12, 95% CI [1.05, 1.19], N = 62). Individuals with higher AIs were more likely to
              remember images associated with larger positive PEs, and those with lower AIs were
              more likely to remember images associated with larger negative PEs. Shaded areas
              represent 95% CI for estimates. ***p &lt; .001.</p>
          </figcaption>
        </figure>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">As expected, accuracy was
          significantly higher for those with a higher false alarm rate (suggesting a bias towards
          old responses; <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z =</em> 4.86,
          p&lt;0.001, OR = 1.41, 95% CI [1.23, 1.61]), and accuracy decreased as the task progressed
          (main effect of memory trial number: <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = –5.83, p&lt;0.001, OR = 0.82, 95%
          CI [0.76, 0.87]). There was a significant effect of unsigned PE magnitude on memory (<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 4.75, p&lt;0.001, OR =
          1.19, 95% CI [1.11, 1.28]), such images that coincided with largerPEs were better
          remembered. There was also a significant three-way interaction between PE magnitude, PE
          valence, and AI on memory accuracy (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 3.45, p=0.001, OR = 1.12, 95% CI
          [1.05, 1.19]), such that people with more positive AIs were more likely to remember images
          associated with larger positive PEs (<a href="#fig4" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 4B</a>). The converse was also true:
          those with lower AIs were more likely to remember images presented concurrently with
          outcomes that elicited higher-magnitude negative PEs. Ordinal regression results that
          considered all four levels of confidence in recollection judgments (<a href="#supp1"
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Supplementary file 1</a>, <a
            href="#app1fig4" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure
            4</a>) yielded consistent results and suggested that effects were primarily driven by
          high-confidence responses. Notably, neither linear (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 0.32, p=0.750, OR = 1.02, 95% CI
          [0.89, 1.17]) nor quadratic age (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = –0.18, p=0.856, OR = 0.99, 95% CI
          [0.84, 1.15]) were significant predictors of memory, suggesting that AI parsimoniously
          accounted for individual differences in memory.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">To test whether differences in
          memory for outcomes of deterministic versus probabilistic trials might have driven the
          observed AI × PE magnitude × PE valence interaction effect, we reran the regression model
          only within the subset of trials in which participants made probabilistic choices. Our
          results did not change — we observed both a main effect of PE magnitude (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 2.22, p=0.026, OR = 1.11, 95% CI
          [1.01, 1.23], N = 62) and a significant PE valence × PE magnitude × AI interaction (<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 2.34, p=0.019, OR =
          1.11, 95% CI [1.02, 1.21], N = 62).</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Finally, we tested for effects
          of agency — whether an image coincided with the outcome of a free or forced choice — on
          memory performance. We did not find a significant main effect of agency on memory, and
          agency did not significantly modulate the AI × PE magnitude × PE valence interaction
          effect (see Appendix 1 for full results; <a href="#app1fig13" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure 13</a>).</p>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="self-reported-risk-taking">
          Self-reported risk taking</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">One possible explanation for
          our unexpected u-shaped relationship between age and risk preferences in our choice task
          is that the adolescents in our sample might have been atypically risk averse. To
          investigate this possibility, we examined the relation between age and self-reported risk
          taking to the Domain-Specific Risk Taking (DOSPERT) scale <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib9"><span>9</span><span>Blais and
                Weber</span><span>2006</span></a></cite>. A linear regression model including
          quadratic age was a better fit than the model including linear age alone (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">F</em>(1,59) = 9.55, p=0.003). Specifically,
          consistent with prior reports of increased self-reported risk taking in adolescents, we
          found a significant inverted u-shaped quadratic age pattern (<a href="#fig5" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 5</a><em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">, b</em> = –0.42, 95% CI [-0.69, –0.15], <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(59) = –3.09, p=0.003,
          <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.16, 95% CI [0.02, 0.44]).
          There was not a significant linear age pattern in self-reported risk taking (<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = 0.15, 95% CI [–0.09,
          0.39], <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(59) = 1.27,
          p=0.208, <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
              data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.04, 95% CI [0, 0.20]). A
          two-lines regression analysis indicated that risk taking increased until age 15.29 (<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = 0.23, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 2.20, p=0.028) and decreased
          thereafter (<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = –0.09,
          <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = –2.03, p=0.042).
          Despite the fact that both choices in our task and self-report risk taking exhibited
          nonlinear age-related changes, there was not a significant correlation between DOSPERT
          score and risk taking in the task (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">r</em> = –0.12, 95% CI [–0.36, 0.13], <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(60) = –0.95, p=0.347).
        </p>
        <figure itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Figure" id="fig5" title="Figure 5.">
          <label data-itemprop="label">Figure 5.</label><img src="index.html.media/fig5.jpg" alt=""
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/ImageObject">
          <figcaption>
            <h5 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
              id="self-reported-risk-taking-by-age">Self-reported risk taking by age.</h5>
            <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Self-reported risk taking
              on the Domain-Specific Risk Taking (DOSPERT) scale changed nonlinearly with age
              (linear regression: <em itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">b</em> = –0.42, 95% CI [–0.69,–0.15],
              <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>(59) = –3.09,
              p=0.003, <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f</em><sup
                itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup> = 0.16, 95% CI [0.02,
              0.44], N = 62). Shaded region represents 95% CIs for estimates.</p>
          </figcaption>
        </figure>
        <h3 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="experiment-2">Experiment 2
        </h3>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Next, we assessed the
          generalizability of the observed effect of valence biases in learning on memory by
          conducting a reanalysis of a previously published independent dataset from a study that
          used a different experimental task in an adult sample <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib82"><span>82</span><span>Rouhani et
                al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite>. Notably, results from this study suggested
          that unsigned PEs (i.e., PEs of greater magnitude, whether negative or positive)
          facilitated subsequent memory, but no signed effect was observed. Here, we examined
          whether signed valence-specific effects might be evident when we account for individual
          differences in valence biases in learning.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Participants (N = 305)
          completed a Pavlovian learning task in which they encountered indoor and outdoor scenes.
          One type of scene had higher average value than the other. On each trial, an indoor or
          outdoor image was displayed, and participants provided an explicit prediction for the
          average value of that scene type. After the learning task, participants completed a memory
          test for the scenes.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">To quantify valence biases in
          this task, we fit an ‘Explicit Prediction’ RL model that was similar to the RSTD model
          used in Experiment 1, but was fit to participants’ trial-by-trial predictions rather than
          to choices. Like RSTD, the Explicit Prediction model included <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> and <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup>, allowing us to quantify each
          participant’s AI based on the relative size of their best-fit <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> and <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup> parameters. Mean AI was –0.11
          (<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">SD =</em> 0.34). Next, we
          ran a generalized linear mixed-effects model, as in Experiment 1, to examine whether PE
          valence and magnitude interacted with AI to predict subsequent memory, controlling for
          false alarm rate and memory trial number. Results are reported in <a href="#fig6"
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 6</a>.</p>
        <figure itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Figure" id="fig6" title="Figure 6.">
          <label data-itemprop="label">Figure 6.</label><img src="index.html.media/fig6.jpg" alt=""
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/ImageObject">
          <figcaption>
            <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
              id="the-relation-between-valence-biases-in-learning-and-incidental-memory-for-pictures-presented-with-trial-outcomes-experiment-2">
              The relation between valence biases in learning and incidental memory for pictures
              presented with trial outcomes (Experiment 2).</h4>
            <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Reanalysis of data from
              <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                  href="#bib82"><span>82</span><span>Rouhani et
                    al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite>. (<strong itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Strong">A</strong>) Results from generalized
              mixed-effects regression depicting fixed effects on memory accuracy. Whiskers
              represent 95% CI. (<strong itemscope=""
                itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Strong">B</strong>) Estimated marginal means plot
              showing the three-way interaction between AI, PE valence, and PE magnitude (<em
                itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 2.19, p=0.029, OR
              = 1.07, 95% CI [1.01, 1.13], N = 305). Individuals with higher AIs were more likely to
              remember images associated with larger positive PEs, and those with lower AIs were
              more likely to remember images associated with larger negative PEs. Shaded areas
              represent 95% CI for estimates. *p &lt; .05, ***p &lt; .001.</p>
          </figcaption>
        </figure>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Consistent with the results
          reported in the original manuscript <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib82"><span>82</span><span>Rouhani et
                al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite>, as well as the findings in Experiment 1,
          there was a strong main effect of unsigned PE (i.e., PE magnitude) on memory (<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 5.09, p&lt;0.001, OR =
          1.19, 95% CI [1.12, 1.28]). However, aligned with our results from Experiment 1, we also
          observed a significant three-way interaction between AI, PE magnitude, and PE valence (<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> = 2.19, p=0.029, OR =
          1.07, 95% CI [1.01, 1.13]). Qualitative examination of this interaction effect suggests
          that the pattern of results differed slightly from that in Experiment 1. In Experiment 2,
          differences in memory performance as a function of AI were primarily apparent for images
          coinciding with negative PEs (<a href="#fig6" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 6B</a>): those who learned more from
          negative PEs also had better episodic memory for images that coincided with increasingly
          large negative PEs, while all participants appeared to have stronger memory for images
          coinciding with larger positive PEs. Notably, the interaction pattern here mirrors that
          within the subset of forced trials from Experiment 1 (<a href="#app1fig13" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure 13B</a>) where, as in
          Experiment 2, participants learned from observed outcomes, but did not make free choices.
          One possibility is that PE magnitude and PE valence enhance memory through separate
          mechanisms, with a universal positive effect of unsigned PEs but a contextually (depending
          on choice agency) and individually variable effect of PE valence.</p>
        <h2 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="discussion">Discussion</h2>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">In this study, we examined
          whether asymmetry in learning from good versus bad choice outcomes changed across
          adolescence, and whether valence biases in RL also influenced episodic memory encoding.
          Specifically, we hypothesized that adolescents would place greater weight on good than bad
          outcomes during learning, a potential cognitive bias that may contribute to the increased
          risk taking during adolescence evident in real-world epidemiological data <cite
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib48"><span>48</span><span>Kann et al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite>. We
          indeed observed nonlinear age differences in valence-based learning asymmetries, but in
          the direction opposite from our prediction. Adolescents learned more from outcomes that
          were worse than expected, which was reflected in less risk taking relative to children and
          adults. Within this developmental sample, individual differences in learning biases were
          mirrored in subsequent memory. People who learned more from surprising negative versus
          positive outcomes also had better memory for images that coincided with negative outcomes,
          and vice versa. Although the precise pattern of results differed slightly, this relation
          between idiosyncratic valence biases in RL and corresponding biases in subsequent memory
          was also evident in a second independent sample in a different task <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib82"><span>82</span><span>Rouhani et
                al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite>, suggesting that this finding is
          generalizable. Collectively, these results highlight age-related changes across
          adolescence in the computation of subjective value and demonstrate that an individually
          varying valence asymmetric valuation process also influences how information is
          prioritized in memory.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Age-related shifts in learning
          rate asymmetry were driven primarily by changes in negative, rather than positive,
          learning rates. Whereas negative learning rates changed nonlinearly with age, there was no
          evidence for significant age differences in positive learning rates. This absence of
          age-related change in reward learning may seem counterintuitive given a large literature
          characterizing heightened reward sensitivity in adolescence (for reviews, see <cite
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib39"><span>39</span><span>Galván</span><span>2013</span></a></cite>; <cite
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib89"><span>89</span><span>Silverman et
                al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite>; <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib98"><span>98</span><span>Duijvenvoorde et
                al.</span><span>2016</span></a></cite>); however, these effects have largely been
          observed in tasks in which learning was not required. Moreover, heightened reactivity to
          negatively valenced stimuli has also been observed in adolescents, relative to children
          <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib59"><span>59</span><span>Master et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite>
          and adults <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib40"><span>40</span><span>Galván and
                McGlennen</span><span>2013</span></a></cite>, and adolescents have been found to
          exhibit greater sensitivity to negative social evaluative feedback than adults <cite
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib78"><span>78</span><span>Rodman et al.</span><span>2017</span></a></cite>.
          While a relatively small number of studies have used RL models to characterize age-related
          changes in valence-specific value updating <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib18"><span>18</span><span>Christakou et
                  al.</span><span>2013</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib42"><span>42</span><span>Hauser
                  et al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib45"><span>45</span><span>Jones et
                  al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib59"><span>59</span><span>Master
                  et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib63"><span>63</span><span>Moutoussis et
                  al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib96"><span>96</span><span>Bos et
                  al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite></span>, age patterns reported in these
          studies vary substantially and none observed the same pattern of valence asymmetries
          present in our data. Variability in these findings may be due in part to substantial
          variation in the task reward structures, each of which required specific asymmetric
          settings of learning rates in order to perform optimally <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib16"><span>16</span><span>Cazé and
                  Meer</span><span>2013</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib68"><span>68</span><span>Nussenbaum and
                  Hartley</span><span>2019</span></a></cite></span>. This task variation limits the
          ability to differentiate age differences in optimal learning from systematic age
          differences in the influence of positive versus negative prediction errors on subjective
          value computation <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib68"><span>68</span><span>Nussenbaum and
                Hartley</span><span>2019</span></a></cite>. In contrast, our study used a paradigm
          in which risky and safe options had equal EV, allowing us to index risk preferences and
          corresponding valence biases in a context where there was no optimal strategy. Given the
          lack of convergence in the literature to date, further studies characterizing valence
          asymmetries in learning using unconfounded measures will be needed to ascertain how
          broadly the biases we observed generalize to learning contexts with varying reward
          statistics (e.g., different outcome probabilities or outcomes that are truly negative
          instead of neutral).</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Across two experimental
          samples, participants’ idiosyncratic tendencies to place greater weight on outcomes that
          elicited either positive or negative prediction errors was, in turn, associated with a
          propensity to form stronger incidental memories for images paired with these outcomes
          during learning. This correspondence between valence biases in evaluation and in memory is
          consistent with past findings. Greater risk-seeking choice behavior has been associated
          with better memory for the magnitude of extreme win outcomes <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib55"><span>55</span><span>Ludvig et
                al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite> as well as greater recalled frequency of win
          outcomes <span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib57"><span>57</span><span>Madan et
                  al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib58"><span>58</span><span>Madan et
                  al.</span><span>2017</span></a></cite></span>, whereas risk-averse choices have
          been associated with the opposite pattern. Our results extend these findings by linking
          individual risk preferences to an underlying learning algorithm that predicts the valence
          specificity of corresponding memory biases and by demonstrating that these biases extend
          to episodic features incidentally associated with valenced outcomes. Moreover, while
          several prior studies employing computational analyses of learning have variably observed
          enhanced memory for images coinciding with outcomes that elicit positive <span
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib26"><span>26</span><span>Davidow
                  et al.</span><span>2016</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib44"><span>44</span><span>Jang et
                  al.</span><span>2019</span></a></cite></span>, negative <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib47"><span>47</span><span>Kalbe and
                Schwabe</span><span>2020</span></a></cite>, or high-magnitude (independent of
          valence) PEs <span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib82"><span>82</span><span>Rouhani et
                  al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib83"><span>83</span><span>Rouhani
                  and Niv</span><span>2019</span></a></cite></span>, our findings suggest that
          consideration of individual differences in the prioritization of positive versus negative
          PEs may be critical in understanding how these aspects of value-based learning signals
          relate to memory encoding.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Attention likely played a
          critical role in the observed learning and memory effects. Although our study did not
          include direct measures of attention, there is a large literature demonstrating the
          critical role of attention in both RL <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib28"><span>28</span><span>Dayan et
                  al.</span><span>2000</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib43"><span>43</span><span>Holland
                  and Schiffino</span><span>2016</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib70"><span>70</span><span>Pearce
                  and Hall</span><span>1980</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib75"><span>75</span><span>Radulescu et
                  al.</span><span>2019</span></a></cite></span> and memory formation <cite
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib20"><span>20</span><span>Chun and
                Turk-Browne</span><span>2007</span></a></cite>. Prominent theoretical accounts have
          proposed that attention should be preferentially allocated to stimuli that are more
          uncertain <span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib28"><span>28</span><span>Dayan et
                  al.</span><span>2000</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib70"><span>70</span><span>Pearce
                  and Hall</span><span>1980</span></a></cite></span>. In our study, memory was
          better for items that coincided with probabilistic compared to deterministic outcomes.
          This finding likely reflects greater attention to the episodic features associated with
          outcomes of uncertain choice options. Importantly, however, our memory findings could not
          be solely explained via an uncertainty-driven attention account as the relation between
          idiosyncratic asymmetric valence biases and memory was also evident within the subset of
          trials with probabilistic outcomes. Thus, our observed memory effects may reflect
          differential attention to valenced outcomes that varies systematically across individuals
          in a manner that can be accounted for by asymmetries in their learning rates. Such valence
          biases in attention have been widely observed in clinical disorders <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib2"><span>2</span><span>Bar-Haim
                  et al.</span><span>2007</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib62"><span>62</span><span>Mogg and
                  Bradley</span><span>2016</span></a></cite></span> and may also be individually
          variable within non-clinical populations.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">In Experiment 1 of the present
          study, participants observed the outcomes of both free and forced choices. Prior studies
          have demonstrated differential effects of free versus forced choices on both learning and
          memory <span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib17"><span>17</span><span>Chambon
                  et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib21"><span>21</span><span>Cockburn
                  et al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib49"><span>49</span><span>Katzman
                  and Hartley</span><span>2020</span></a></cite></span>, which may reflect greater
          allocation of attention to contexts in which individuals have agency. Valence asymmetries
          in learning have been found to vary as a function of whether choices are free or forced,
          such that participants tend to exhibit a greater positive learning rate bias for free than
          for forced choices <span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib17"><span>17</span><span>Chambon et
                  al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib21"><span>21</span><span>Cockburn
                  et al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite></span>. Here, we did not observe
          positive learning rate asymmetries for free choices, and a model that included separate
          valenced learning rates for free versus forced choices was not favored by model
          comparison. Studies have also found that subsequent memory is facilitated for images
          associated with free, relative to forced, choices <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib49"><span>49</span><span>Katzman
                  and Hartley</span><span>2020</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib64"><span>64</span><span>Murty et
                  al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite></span>. In Experiment 1, there was no
          significant effect of agency on memory. However, in Experiment 2, in which participants
          provided explicit predictions of choice outcomes, but did not make free choices, the
          qualitative pattern of learning and memory biases differed from that observed in
          Experiment 1, and closely resembled the pattern present within the subset of forced-choice
          trials from that experiment. Namely, in each of these conditions where participants were
          not able to make free choices, all participants, regardless of AI, exhibited better memory
          for images presented with large positive PEs. Thus, while our study was not explicitly
          designed to test for such effects, this preliminary evidence suggests that choice agency
          may modulate the relation between valence biases in learning and corresponding biases in
          long-term memory, a hypothesis that should be directly assessed in future studies.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">While one interpretation of our
          results is that asymmetric value updating influences the prioritization of events in
          memory, recent theoretical proposals <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib8"><span>8</span><span>Biderman
                  et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib53"><span>53</span><span>Lengyel
                  and Dayan</span><span>2008</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib87"><span>87</span><span>Shadlen
                  and Shohamy</span><span>2016</span></a></cite></span> and empirical findings <span
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib1"><span>1</span><span>Bakkour et
                  al.</span><span>2019</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib11"><span>11</span><span>Bornstein et
                  al.</span><span>2017</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib32"><span>32</span><span>Duncan
                  et al.</span><span>2019</span></a></cite></span> suggest a potential alternative
          account. According to this work, sampling of specific valenced episodes from memory can
          influence decision-making and serve as a different way of making choices under uncertainty
          than the sort of incremental value computation formalized in RL models. Under this
          conceptualization, a tendency to preferentially encode or retrieve past positive or
          negative experiences may, in turn, drive risk-averse or risk-seeking choice biases. While
          our task design does not enable clear arbitration between these alternative directional
          hypotheses, our results provide additional evidence of a tight coupling between valuation
          and episodic memory, and further underscore the importance in examining individual
          differences in valence asymmetries in these processes.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Traditional behavioral economic
          models of choice suggest that risk preferences stem from a nonlinear transformation of
          objective value into subjective utility <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib7"><span>7</span><span>Bernoulli</span><span>1954</span></a></cite><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib46"><span>46</span><span>Kahneman and
                  Tversky</span><span>1979</span></a></cite></span>, with decreases in the marginal
          utility produced by each unit of objective value (i.e., a concave utility curve) producing
          risk aversion. Our present study was motivated by the insight that such risk-averse, or
          risk-seeking, preferences can also arise from an RL process that asymmetrically integrates
          valenced prediction errors <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib61"><span>61</span><span>Mihatsch
                  and Neuneier</span><span>2002</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib67"><span>67</span><span>Niv et
                  al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite></span>. In Experiment 1, we fit both a
          traditional behavioral economic model with exponential subjective utilities as well as a
          model with valenced learning rates. Notably, there was a very close correspondence between
          learning asymmetries derived from the valenced learning rate model and the risk preference
          parameter from the utility model, and model comparison indicated that these models
          provided comparably good accounts of participants’ choice data. Thus, future research will
          be needed to arbitrate between utility and valenced learning rate models of decisions
          under risk. However, a potential parsimonious account is that a risk-sensitive learning
          algorithm could represent a biologically plausible process for the construction of risk
          preferences <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib25"><span>25</span><span>Dabney et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite>,
          in which distortions of value are produced through differential subjective weighting of
          good and bad choice outcomes <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib61"><span>61</span><span>Mihatsch
                  and Neuneier</span><span>2002</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib67"><span>67</span><span>Niv et
                  al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite></span>.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Contrary to our a priori
          hypothesis, and to epidemiological <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib48"><span>48</span><span>Kann et
                  al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib93"><span>93</span><span>Steinberg</span><span>2013</span></a></cite></span>
          and theoretical <span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib15"><span>15</span><span>Casey et
                  al.</span><span>2008</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib56"><span>56</span><span>Luna</span><span>2009</span></a></cite><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib92"><span>92</span><span>Steinberg</span><span>2008</span></a></cite></span>
          work suggesting that adolescence is a period of increased risk taking, we found that
          adolescents took fewer risks than children or adults in our task. While at first glance
          these results might appear anomalous, within the same sample, we found that adolescents
          reported greater real-world risk taking than both children and adults. This lack of
          correspondence between task-based and self-reported indices of risk taking is consistent
          with previous findings in adults <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib76"><span>76</span><span>Radulescu
                et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite>, and suggests that these two measures
          reflect separable constructs. Past empirical studies assessing developmental changes in
          risky choice in laboratory tasks have observed varied results <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib30"><span>30</span><span>Defoe et
                  al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib79"><span>79</span><span>Rosenbaum et
                  al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib80"><span>80</span><span>Rosenbaum and
                  Hartley</span><span>2019</span></a></cite></span>, but highlight two potential
          features of tasks that may elicit heightened adolescent risk taking. Adolescents may be
          more likely to take risks in tasks that require learning about risk through experience
          versus explicit description <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib79"><span>79</span><span>Rosenbaum et
                al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite>, and in which the probabilistic negative
          outcomes are rare (e.g., the Iowa Gambling Task; <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib6"><span>6</span><span>Bechara et
                al.</span><span>1997</span></a></cite>), qualities that are also true of many
          real-world risk-taking contexts. While our task involved experiential learning, risky
          choices resulted in rewarding outcomes on half of the trials and non-win outcomes on the
          other half. Thus, undesirable outcomes were not rare and there were no true negative
          outcomes. Highlighting the important influence of such contextual features on
          decision-making across development, a recent study found that adolescents were more prone
          than adults to ‘underweight’ rare outcomes in decision-making relative to their true
          probabilities, conferring a greater propensity to take risks in situations where rare
          outcomes are unfavorable <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib81"><span>81</span><span>Rosenbaum et
                al.</span><span>2021</span></a></cite>. Collectively, these findings suggest that
          specific details of an experimental design may influence the age-related patterns of risk
          taking observed in laboratory tasks <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib80"><span>80</span><span>Rosenbaum
                and Hartley</span><span>2019</span></a></cite> and suggest that greater ecological
          validity of task designs might be best achieved by mirroring the key statistical
          properties of real-world decision contexts of interest.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">The present findings raise the
          suggestion that, for a given individual, valence asymmetries in value-based learning might
          become more negative from childhood into adolescence, and more positive from adolescence
          into young adulthood. However, an important caveat is that such patterns of developmental
          change cannot be validly inferred from cross-sectional studies, which are confounded by
          potential effects of cohort <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib86"><span>86</span><span>Schaie</span><span>1965</span></a></cite>. Past
          studies have demonstrated that valence asymmetries in RL are indeed malleable within a
          given individual, exhibiting sensitivity to the statistics of the learning environment
          (e.g., the informativeness of positive versus negative outcomes; <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib73"><span>73</span><span>Pulcu and
                Browning</span><span>2017</span></a></cite>) as well as to endogenous manipulations
          such as the pharmacological manipulation of neuromodulatory systems <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib60"><span>60</span><span>Michely et
                al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite>. Future longitudinal studies will be needed
          to definitively establish whether valence biases in learning exhibit systematic
          age-related changes within an individual over developmental time.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Adolescence is conventionally
          viewed as a period of heightened reward-seeking, begging the question of why adolescents
          might exhibit the strongest negative valence bias in learning and memory. Theoretical
          consideration of the adaptive role of valence asymmetries may provide a parsimonious
          resolution to this apparent contradiction <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib16"><span>16</span><span>Cazé and
                Meer</span><span>2013</span></a></cite>. Somewhat counterintuitively, greater
          updating for negative versus positive prediction errors (i.e., a negative valence bias)
          yields systematic distortions in subjective value that effectively increase the contrast
          between outcomes in the reward domain (e.g., a participant with a negative learning
          asymmetry will represent the risky 80- and 40-point machines as being more different from
          each other than a participant with a positive learning asymmetry), facilitating optimal
          reward-motivated action selection. This tuning of learning rates is particularly
          beneficial in environments in which potential rewards are abundant <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib16"><span>16</span><span>Cazé and
                Meer</span><span>2013</span></a></cite>, which may be true during adolescence when
          social elements of the environment acquire unique reward value <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib10"><span>10</span><span>Blakemore</span><span>2008</span></a></cite><cite
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib66"><span>66</span><span>Nardou et
                  al.</span><span>2019</span></a></cite></span>. While negative valence biases may
          be adaptive for reward-guided decision-making, a propensity to form more persistent
          memories for negative outcomes may also contribute to adolescents’ heightened
          vulnerability to psychopathology <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib51"><span>51</span><span>Lee et
                  al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib69"><span>69</span><span>Paus et
                  al.</span><span>2008</span></a></cite></span>. A recent study using computational
          formalizations found that adults who were biased toward remembering images associated with
          negative, relative to positive, prediction errors also exhibited greater depressive
          symptoms <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib83"><span>83</span><span>Rouhani and Niv</span><span>2019</span></a></cite>.
          Moreover, negative biases in real-world autobiographical memory are a hallmark of
          depression and anxiety in both adolescents <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib50"><span>50</span><span>Kuyken and
                Howell</span><span>2006</span></a></cite> and adults <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib31"><span>31</span><span>Dillon
                  and Pizzagalli</span><span>2018</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib37"><span>37</span><span>Gaddy
                  and Ingram</span><span>2014</span></a></cite></span>. Future research should
          examine how valence biases in learning and memory, as well as the reward statistics of an
          individual’s real-world environment, relate to vulnerability or resilience to
          psychopathology across adolescent development. Finally, given an extensive literature
          demonstrating the pronounced influence of neuromodulatory systems on both valence biases
          in RL <span itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib24"><span>24</span><span>Cox et
                  al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib35"><span>35</span><span>Frank et
                  al.</span><span>2004</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib36"><span>36</span><span>Frank et
                  al.</span><span>2007</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib60"><span>60</span><span>Michely
                  et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite></span> and value-guided memory <span
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib54"><span>54</span><span>Lisman
                  and Grace</span><span>2005</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib84"><span>84</span><span>Sara</span><span>2009</span></a></cite></span>,
          future studies might examine how developmental changes within these systems relate to the
          age-related shifts in valence biases observed here.</p>
        <h2 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="materials-and-methods">
          Materials and methods</h2>
        <h3 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="experiment-1-1">Experiment 1
        </h3>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="participants">Participants
        </h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Sixty-two participants ages
          8–27 years were included in our final sample (mean age = 17.63, SD = 5.76, 32 females).
          Nine additional participants completed the study but were removed from the sample due to
          poor task performance (described further below). This sample size is consistent with prior
          studies that used age as a continuous predictor and have found significant age differences
          in decision-making (e.g., <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib29"><span>29</span><span>Decker et al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite>;
          <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib71"><span>71</span><span>Potter et al.</span><span>2017</span></a></cite>;
          <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib97"><span>97</span><span>Bos et al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite>). All
          participants had no previous diagnosis of a learning disorder, no current psychiatric
          medication use, and normal color vision according to self- or parent report.</p>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="risk-sensitive-rl-task">
          Risk-sensitive RL task</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">In the present study,
          participants completed a risk-sensitive RL task adapted from <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib67"><span>67</span><span>Niv et
                al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite> in which participants learned, through trial
          and error, the values and probabilities associated with five ‘point machines’ (<a
            href="#fig1" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 1A</a>). Three
          machines were deterministic and gave their respective payoffs 100% of the time (<a
            href="#fig1" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 1B</a>). Two
          machines were probabilistic (or risky) and gave their respective payoffs 50% of the time
          and zero points the other 50% (<a href="#fig1" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 1B</a>). Importantly, EV could be
          deconfounded from risk as there were two pairs of machines in which both probabilistic and
          deterministic options yielded the same EV (i.e., 100% 20 points and 50/50% 0/40 points;
          100% 40 points and 50/50% 0/80 points). We presented each choice outcome on a ‘ticket’
          that also displayed a trial-unique picture of an object. A subsequent memory test allowed
          us to explore the interaction between choice outcomes and memory encoding across age. The
          task was programmed in MATLAB Version R2017a (The MathWorks, Inc, Natick, MA).</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">All participants completed a
          tutorial that involved detailed instructions and practice trials with machines that had
          the same probability structure as the machines they would encounter in the later task
          (i.e., one machine always gave 1 point, the other gave 0 point on half of trials and 2
          points on the other half). Then, participants completed the RL task, which included 183
          trials. There were 66 total ‘risky’ choices between probabilistic and deterministic
          machines. 42 of these risky trials involved choices between machines with equal EV, while
          24 trials required choices between the probabilistic 0/80 machine and the deterministic 20
          point machine. Participants also experienced 75 single-option ‘forced’ trials (15 for each
          of the five machines) to ensure each participant learned about values and probabilities
          associated with all of the machines. During forced trials, only one machine appeared on
          the screen, and the participant pressed a button to indicate the location of the machine
          (left or right). Finally, there were 42 test trials in which one machine’s value had
          absolute dominance over the other, with all outcomes of one option being greater than or
          equal to all outcomes of the other option (e.g., 100% chance of 40 points versus 50% of 40
          points and 50% of 0 points). Test trials allowed us to gauge participants’ learning and
          understanding of the task. We excluded nine participants who did not choose correctly on
          at least 60% of test trials in the last 2/3 of the task (four children ages 8–9, three
          adolescents ages 14–16, and two adults ages 24–25). The trials were divided into blocks
          with 1/3 of the trials in each block, and after each block, participants could choose to
          take a short break. Unbeknownst to participants, trials were pseudo-randomized, such that
          1/3 of each type of trial was presented in each block of the task, with the order of trial
          types randomized within each block. Outcomes of risky machines were additionally
          pseudo-randomized so that within each series of eight choices from a given risky machine,
          four choices resulted in a win and four resulted in zero point, in a random order.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">On each trial, participants
          were asked to make a choice within 3 s after the machines were presented. If they chose in
          time, the outcome of the choice was presented on a ‘ticket’ along with a randomly
          selected, trial-unique picture of an object for 2 s (<a href="#fig1" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 1A</a>). If they did not respond in time,
          the words ‘TOO SLOW’ were presented, without a picture, for 1 s before the task moved to
          the next trial. Across all participants, only 37 (out of 11,346) total trials were missed
          for slow responses, with a maximum of 7 missed trials for one participant.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">After completing the choice
          task, participants were probed for their explicit memory of points associated with each
          machine. For every machine, a participant was first asked, “Did this machine always give
          you the same number of points, or did it sometimes give 0 points and sometimes give you
          more points?” If the participant indicated that the machine always gave the same number of
          points, they were asked, “How many points did this machine give you each time you chose
          it?” Otherwise, they were asked, “How many points did this machine give you when it did
          not give 0 points?” To respond to this second question, participants selected from all
          possible point outcomes presented in the task (0, 20, 40, 80). There was no time limit for
          responding to these questions.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Next, participants completed a
          surprise memory test, in which all 183 images presented during the task and 183 novel
          images were presented in random order (<a href="#fig1" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Figure 1C</a>). Images corresponding to the few
          choice trials that were missed due to slow responses were recategorized as novel. Ratings
          were on a scale from 1 (definitely saw during the task) to 4 (definitely did not see
          during the task), and participants had unlimited time to indicate their responses. All
          images were obtained from the Bank of Standardized Stimuli (BOSS; <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib13"><span>13</span><span>Brodeur et
                al.</span><span>2010</span></a></cite>; <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib14"><span>14</span><span>Brodeur et
                al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite>) and were selected to be familiar and
          nameable for the age range in our sample. For each participant, half of the set of photos
          was randomly chosen to be presented during the task and half were assigned to be novel
          images for the memory test.</p>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
          id="self-reported-risk-taking-1">Self-reported risk taking</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">To assess the predictive
          validity of our findings for real-world risk taking, participants completed the DOSPERT
          scale <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib9"><span>9</span><span>Blais and Weber</span><span>2006</span></a></cite>.
          The DOSPERT indexes participants’ likelihood of taking risks in five domains: monetary,
          health and safety, recreational, ethical, and social. We computed the mean self-reported
          likelihood of risk taking across all behaviors on the DOSPERT as a measure of real-world
          risk taking. Age-appropriate variants of the DOSPERT were administered to children (8–12
          years old), adolescents (13–17 years old), and adults (ages 18 and older) <span
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib3"><span>3</span><span>Barkley-Levenson et
                  al.</span><span>2013</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib91"><span>91</span><span>Somerville et
                  al.</span><span>2017</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib98"><span>98</span><span>Duijvenvoorde et
                  al.</span><span>2016</span></a></cite></span>.</p>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="reasoning-assessment">
          Reasoning assessment</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">We administered the Vocabulary
          and Matrix Reasoning sections of the Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence (WASI;
          <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib101"><span>101</span><span>Wechsler</span><span>2011</span></a></cite>),
          which index verbal cognition and abstract reasoning, to ensure that these measures were
          not confounded with age within our sample. WASI scores did not vary by linear or quadratic
          age (_p_s&gt;.2). Thus, we did not include this measure in subsequent analyses.</p>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="procedure">Procedure</h4>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Participants first provided
          informed consent (adults) or assent and parental consent (children and adolescents). Next,
          participants completed the risk-sensitive RL task and memory test, followed by the DOSPERT
          questionnaire and the WASI. Participants were paid $15 for completing the experiment,
          which lasted approximately 1 hr. Although participants were told that an additional bonus
          payment would be based on the number of points they earned in the risk-sensitive RL task,
          all participants received the same $5 bonus payment. The study protocol was approved by
          the New York University Institutional Review Board.</p>
        <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="analyses">Analyses</h4>
        <h5 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
          id="reinforcement-learning-models">Reinforcement-learning models</h5>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Four RL models were fit to
          participants’ choices in the task.</p>
        <h6 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="td-model">TD model</h6>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">We fit a TD learning model
          <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib94"><span>94</span><span>Sutton and
                Barto</span><span>1998</span></a></cite>, in which the estimated value of choosing a
          given machine (<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">Q<sub
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub></em>) is updated on
          each trial (<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>) according
          to the following function: <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">Q<sub itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub></em>(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em> + 1) = <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">Q<sub itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub></em>(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>) + <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em> * δ(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>), in which δ(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>) = <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">r</em>(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>) – <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">Q<sub itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub></em>(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>) is the prediction error,
          representing how much better or worse the reward outcome (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">r</em>) is than the estimated value of that
          machine. δ is scaled by a learning rate <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em>, a free parameter that is estimated
          separately for each participant.</p>
        <h6 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="rstd-model">RSTD model</h6>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">The RSTD model is similar to
          the TD model but includes two separate learning rates for prediction errors of different
          signs. Specifically, when δ is positive, the value of the chosen machine is updated
          according to the equation: Q<sub itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub>(t + 1) = Q<sub itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub>(t) + <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> * δ(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>). When δ is negative, the chosen
          machine’s value is updated as Q<sub itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub>(t + 1) = Q<sub itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub>(t) + <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup> * δ(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>). Including two learning rates allows
          the model to be sensitive to the risk preferences revealed by participants’ choices across
          the probabilistic and deterministic (‘risky versus safe’) choice pairs in the paradigm
          <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib67"><span>67</span><span>Niv et al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite>. For
          a given individual, if <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> is greater than <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup>, Q-values of the machines with
          variable outcomes will be greater than those of deterministic machines with equal EV, and
          the individual will be more likely to make risk-seeking choices. Conversely if <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup> is greater than <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup>, the Q-values of the risky
          machines will be lower than their EVs, making risk-averse choices more likely. To index
          the relative difference between <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> and <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup>, we computed an AI as AI = (<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> - <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup>)/(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> + <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α<sup itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup></em>), where an AI &gt; 0
          reflects greater weighting of positive relative to negative prediction errors, whereas an
          AI &lt; 0 reflects greater relative weighting of negative prediction errors <cite
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib67"><span>67</span><span>Niv et al.</span><span>2012</span></a></cite>.</p>
        <h6 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="fourlr-model">FourLR model
        </h6>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">In our task, participants made
          both free and forced choices. Past research suggests that valence biases in learning may
          differ as a function of choice agency <span itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib17"><span>17</span><span>Chambon
                  et al.</span><span>2020</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib21"><span>21</span><span>Cockburn
                  et al.</span><span>2014</span></a></cite></span>. To test this possibility, we
          assessed the fit of a FourLR model, which was the same as the RSTD model except that it
          included four learning rates instead of two, with separate <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> and <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em><sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup> parameters for free and forced
          choices.</p>
        <h6 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="utility-model">Utility model
        </h6>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">As a further point of
          comparison with the TD, RSTD, and FourLR models, we estimated a utility model that
          employed the same value update equation as the TD model, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">Q<sub itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub></em>(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em> + 1) = <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">Q<sub itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub></em>(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>) + <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em> * δ(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>). However, δ was defined according to
          the equation δ(<em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>) = <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">r</em>(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>)<sup itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">ρ</sup><em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">Q<sub itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M</sub></em>(<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>), in which the reward outcome is
          exponentially transformed by <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">ρ</em>, which represents the curvature of
          each individual’s subjective utility function <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib72"><span>72</span><span>Pratt</span><span>1964</span></a></cite>. <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">ρ</em> &lt; 1 corresponds to a
          concave utility function, which yields risk aversion as a result of diminishing
          sensitivity to returns <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib95"><span>95</span><span>Tversky and
                Kahneman</span><span>1992</span></a></cite>. In contrast, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">ρ</em> &gt; 1 corresponds to a convex
          utility function that yields risk-seeking behavior.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">In all models, Q-values were
          converted to probabilities of choosing each option in a trial using the softmax rule,
          P<sub itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M1</sub> = e<sup
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">β*Q(t)M1</sup>/(e<sup
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">β*Q(t)M1</sup>+ e<sup
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">β*Q(t)M2</sup>), where P<sub
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Subscript">M1</sub> is the predicted
          probability of choosing Machine 1, with the inverse temperature parameter <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">β</em> capturing how sensitive an
          individual’s choices are to the difference in value between the two machines. Notably,
          outcomes of the forced trials were included in the value updating step for each model.
          However, forced trials were not included in the modeling stage in which learned values are
          passed through the softmax function to determine choice probabilities as there was only a
          single-choice option on these trials.</p>
        <h3 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="model-fitting">Model fitting
        </h3>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Prior to model fitting, outcome
          values were rescaled between 0 and 1, with 1 representing the maximum possible point
          outcome (80). We fit all RL models for each participant via maximum a posteriori
          estimation in MATLAB using the optimization function fminunc. _Q-_values were initialized
          at 0.5 (equivalent to 40 points). Bounds and priors for each of the parameters are listed
          in <a href="#table1" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Table 1</a>.
          There was no linear or quadratic relationship between BIC and age in any of the models
          (all _p_s&gt;0.1).</p>
        <table id="table1" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/Table">
          <caption><label data-itemprop="label">Table 1.</label>
            <div itemprop="caption">
              <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
                id="bounds-priors-and-recoverability-for-parameters-in-each-model">Bounds, priors,
                and recoverability for parameters in each model.</h4>
            </div>
          </caption>
          <thead>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Model</th>
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Parameter</th>
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Bounds</th>
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Prior</th>
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Recoverability</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">TD</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0,1</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Beta(2,2)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.84</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">β</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0.000001, 30</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Gamma(2,3)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.88</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">RSTD</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α<sup itemscope=""
                    itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup></em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0,1</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Beta(2,2)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.79</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α<sup itemscope=""
                    itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup></em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0,1</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Beta(2,2)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.88</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">β</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0.000001, 30</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Gamma(2,3)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.9</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">FourLR</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α<sup itemscope=""
                    itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> free</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0,1</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Beta(2,2)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.79</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α<sup itemscope=""
                    itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup> free</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0,1</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Beta(2,2)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.89</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α<sup itemscope=""
                    itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">+</sup> forced</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0,1</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Beta(2,2)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.76</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α<sup itemscope=""
                    itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript">-</sup> forced</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0,1</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Beta(2,2)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.78</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">β</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0.000001, 30</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Gamma(2,3)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.9</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Utility</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">α</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0,1</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Beta(2,2)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.75</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">β</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0.000001, 30</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Gamma(2,3)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.88</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><em itemscope=""
                  itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">ρ</em></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">0, 2.5</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Gamma(1.5,1.5)</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.88</span></td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
        <h3 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading"
          id="parameter-and-model-recovery">Parameter and model recovery</h3>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">For each model, we simulated
          data for 10,000 subjects with values of each parameter drawn randomly and uniformly from
          the range of possible parameter values. Next, we fit the simulated data using the same
          model. We tested for recoverability of model parameters by correlating the parameter that
          generated the data with the parameters produced through model fitting. These correlations
          are displayed in <a href="#table1" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Table 1</a>. All parameters for TD, RSTD,
          FourLR, and Utility models showed high recoverability.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">To examine the identifiability
          of the TD, RSTD, FourLR, and Utility models, we generated simulated data using each model
          and fit all four of the models, including those that were <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">not</em> used to generate the data to each
          simulated dataset (e.g., we fit all the TD-generated subjects with the TD model as well as
          the RSTD, FourLR, and Utility models). We then used BIC, a quality-of-fit metric that
          penalizes models for additional parameters, to assess whether the generating model was
          also the best-fitting model for each subject. Recoverability was reasonable for all models
          except the least-parsimonious FourLR model (<a href="#table2" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Table 2</a>). Aside from the subjects generated
          by the FourLR model, for all pairwise comparisons between generating and comparison
          models, the majority of simulated subjects were best fit by the generating model. The
          RSTD-simulated subjects who were better fit by the TD model were those who had less
          extreme AI values (<a href="#app1fig7" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure 7</a>), and thus could be more
          parsimoniously captured by a model with a single learning rate. We also found that RSTD
          model parameters were reasonably well recovered across the range of AI observed in our
          empirical sample (see <a href="#app1fig8" itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Link">Appendix 1—figure 8</a>).</p>
        <table id="table2" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/Table">
          <caption><label data-itemprop="label">Table 2.</label>
            <div itemprop="caption">
              <h4 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="model-recovery">Model
                recovery.</h4>
            </div>
          </caption>
          <thead>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></th>
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></th>
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Comparison model</th>
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></th>
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></th>
              <th itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">TD</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">RSTD</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">FourLR</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Utility</td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"> Generating model</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">TD</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">-</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.98</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">1</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.97</span></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">RSTD</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.57</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">-</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.99</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.65</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">FourLR</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.5</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.31</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">-</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.39</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
            </tr>
            <tr itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableRow">
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">Utility</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.58</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.76</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"><span
                  data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">0.99</span></td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell">-</td>
              <td itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/TableCell"></td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Values in this table indicate
          the proportion of participants simulated by the generating model who are best fit by the
          generating model in a pairwise comparison with each alternative model.</p>
        <h3 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="statistical-analyses">
          Statistical analyses</h3>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Statistical analyses were
          performed in R version 4.0.2 <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib74"><span>74</span><span>R Development Core
                Team</span><span>2016</span></a></cite> with a two-tailed alpha threshold of
          p&lt;0.05. For tests of trial-wise effects, we ran linear mixed-effects regression (lmer)
          or generalized linear mixed-effects regression (glmer) models (lme4 package; <cite
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib5"><span>5</span><span>Bates et al.</span><span>2015</span></a></cite>),
          which included participant as a random effect, and estimated random intercepts and slopes
          for each fixed effect. We used the ‘bobyqa’ optimizer with 1 million iterations. Trial
          number was included in lmer and glmer regression models. All independent variables were
          z-scored. We began with this maximal model, which converged for all analyses except one,
          for which we systematically reduced the complexity of the model until it converged <span
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/CiteGroup"><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a href="#bib4"><span>4</span><span>Barr et
                  al.</span><span>2013</span></a></cite><cite itemscope=""
              itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
                href="#bib90"><span>90</span><span>Simonsohn</span><span>2018</span></a></cite></span>,
          which algorithmically determines a break point in the distribution and tests whether
          regression lines on either side of the break point have significant slopes with opposite
          signs.</p>
        <h3 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="reporting">Reporting</h3>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">For one-way and paired <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>-tests, we report <em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>-statistics, p-values,
          and Cohen’s d with 95% confidence intervals (CIs; using the function cohens<em
            itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">d in the rstatix package
            [one-way _t</em>-test] or the effectsize package [paired <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>-test]).</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">For linear regressions, we
          report unstandardized regression coefficients, <em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em>-statistics, and p-values. We also
          report Cohen’s <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">f<sup
              itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Superscript"><span
                data-itemtype="http://schema.org/Number">2</span></sup></em> with 95% CIs, a
          standardized effect size measure <cite itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib22"><span>22</span><span>Cohen</span><span>1992</span></a></cite> computed
          by squaring the output of the function cohens_f in the effectsize package.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">For multilevel models, we
          report test statistics (<em itemscope=""
            itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">t</em> for linear mixed-effects models and
          <em itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Emphasis">z</em> for generalized linear
          mixed-effects models), p-values, and unstandardized effect sizes with 95% CIs
          (unstandardized coefficients for linear mixed-effects models, and odds ratios for
          generalized linear mixed-effects models).</p>
        <h3 itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Heading" id="experiment-2-1">Experiment 2
        </h3>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Next, we looked for evidence
          that valence biases in learning influence memory in a previously published independent
          dataset <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib82"><span>82</span><span>Rouhani et al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite>.
          Notably, results from this study suggested that unsigned PEs (i.e., PEs of greater
          magnitude whether negative or positive) facilitate subsequent memory, but no signed effect
          was observed. Here, we examined whether signed valence-specific effects might be evident
          when we account for individual differences in learning.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Briefly, adult participants
          completed a Pavlovian learning task (i.e., participants did not make choices and could not
          influence the observed outcomes) in which they encountered indoor and outdoor scenes. One
          type of scene had higher average value than the other. On each trial, an indoor or outdoor
          image was displayed, and participants provided an explicit prediction for the average
          value of that scene type. After the learning task, participants completed a memory test
          for the scenes. A detailed description of the experimental paradigm can be found in the
          original publication <cite itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Cite"><a
              href="#bib82"><span>82</span><span>Rouhani et al.</span><span>2018</span></a></cite>.
        </p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">In order to derive each
          participant’s AI, we fit an ‘Explicit Prediction’ RL model to the participants’ estimation
          data (see Appendix 1 for more details on our model specification and fitting procedure).
          Similar to our RSTD model, this model included separate learning rates for trials with
          positive and negative PEs.</p>
        <p itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.stenci.la/Paragraph">Importantly, the RSTD model and
          the Explicit Prediction model differed in that the RSTD model included a β parameter,
          while the Explicit Prediction model did not. In Experiment 1, this extra parameter allowed
          us to use the softmax function to convert the relative estimated values of the two
          machines into a probability of choosing each machine presented, which we then compared to
          participants’ actual choices during maximum likelihood estimation. In contrast, in
          Experiment 2, participants explicitly reported their value predictions (and did not make
          choices), so the model’s free parameters were fit by minimizing the difference between the
          model’s value estimates and participants’ explicit predictions.</p>
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