Publication Date:
2016
abstract:
This paper offers an active inference account of choice behaviour and learning. It focuses on the distinction between goal-directed and habitual behaviour and how they contextualise each other. We show that habits emerge naturally (and autodidactically) from sequential policy optimisation when agents are equipped with state-action policies. In active inference, behaviour has explorative (epistemic) and exploitative (pragmatic) aspects that are sensitive to ambiguity and risk respectively, where epistemic (ambiguity-resolving) behaviour enables pragmatic (reward-seeking) behaviour and the subsequent emergence of habits. Although goal-directed and habitual policies are usually associated with model-based and model-free schemes, we find the more important distinction is between belief-free and belief-based schemes. The underlying (variational) belief updating provides a comprehensive (if metaphorical) process theory for several phenomena, including the transfer of dopamine responses, reversal learning, habit formation and devaluation. Finally, we show that active inference reduces to a classical (Bellman) scheme, in the absence of ambiguity. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Active inference; Habit learning; Bayesian inference; Goal-directed; Free energy; Information gain; Bayesian surprise; Epistemic value; Exploration; Exploitation
List of contributors:
Pezzulo, Giovanni
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