【题 目】A Consciousness-Based Model of Context Sensitive Choice with Application to Decision Making under Changing Awareness
【时 间】2025年9月24日(星期三),14:00-15:30
【地 点】后主楼1610会议室
【主讲人】周恕弘(Chew Soo Hong)教授(西南财经大学)
【主持人】何浩然 教授(欧洲杯 )
摘要:
In Why Consciousness, Aumann (2024) argues that consciousness evolved to enable the experience of incentives while leaving open the question of “How” which we address by relying on brain plasticity at the synaptic level. We hypothesize that the experience of incentive emerges from the modulation of synaptic plasticity respectively by the gain-oriented dopamine and loss-oriented serotonin neuromodulators which together with acetylcholine and norepinephrine, modulating top-down attention and bottom-up salience, yields a sensory component reference-dependent and context-sensitive model of decision making, encompassing a broad range of choice phenomena. As an application, we generalize Karni and Vierø’s (2013) choice model from increasing awareness to changing awareness.
报告人简介:
Chew Soo Hong is a Professor at the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics where he directs its Center for Intelligence Economic Science. He received his Ph.D. in interdisciplinary studies from the University of British Columbia and has taught at the National University of Singapore, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, University of California, Irvine, Johns Hopkins University and University of Arizona. He is among the pioneers in axiomatic non-expected utility models and has been pursuing research in the biology of decision making in parallel. Chew is a fellow of the Econometric Society, which awarded him the Leonard J. Savage thesis prize, and of the Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory. He has published in well-regarded journals in economics such as Econometrica, Review of Economic Studies, Journal of Political Economy, Economic Journal, Journal of the European Economic Association, and Journal of Economic Theory, Management Science as well as more biology-oriented ones including Neuron, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, E-BioMedicine, Neuroscience Science and Behavioral Review, Neuroimage, PLoS ONE, and Proceedings of the Royal Society: Biological Sciences.