Seng Bum Yoo’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Figure 1. Multi-agent evidence integration task and performance (A-C) Example trial. (A) Phase 1. In this phase, animals choose one of the two arenas ("Choose"). Start: two avatars (yellow circles) are presented in the middle of two arenas (red rectangles). Choice contact: The avatars' colors change indicating which avatar belongs to which player (P1: green; P2: magenta) and prompting players to use their joystick to move their avatar toward one of the two arenas based on their belief (think cloud). When an avatar contacts an arena, the choice is registered and the avatar stops moving. The trial proceeds after choices for both animals are registered. Human players additionally indicate their confidence in their choice after making a decision. The players' choices are revealed, whereas the confidence ratings remain private.
Evidence accumulation from experience and observation in the cingulate cortex
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February 2025

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Neelima Valluru

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Mehrdad Jazayeri

We use our experiences to form and update beliefs about the hidden states of the world. When possible, we also gather evidence by observing others. However, how the brain integrates experiential and observational evidence is not understood. We studied the dynamics of evidence integration in a two-player game with volatile hidden states. Both humans and monkeys successfully updated their beliefs while playing the game and observing their partner, though less effectively when observing. Electrophysiological recordings in animals revealed that the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) integrates independent sources of experiential and observational evidence into a coherent neural representation of dynamic belief about the environment's state. The geometry of population activity revealed the computational architecture of this integration and provided a neural account of the behavioral asymmetry between experiential and observational evidence accumulation. This work lays the groundwork for understanding the neural mechanisms underlying evidence accumulation in social contexts within the primate brain.

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