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In each trial, subjects view one of two stimuli, and need to make a binary decision about the outcome that will follow this stimulus. The outcome probabilities associated with each stimulus are correlated: when the outcome probability of one stimulus switches, the outcome probability of the other stimulus switches too. Hence, you can learn from outcomes on one stimulus about the other stimulus.

Variants of the task can include a third, control stimulus, with an independent outcome probability.

Definition contributed by ABaram
correlated bandits has been asserted to measure the following CONCEPTS
No concepts assertions have been added.

Phenotypes associated with correlated bandits

Disorders

No associations have been added.

Traits

No associations have been added.

Behaviors

No associations have been added.


IMPLEMENTATIONS of correlated bandits
No implementations have been added.
EXTERNAL DATASETS for correlated bandits
No implementations have been added.
CONDITIONS

Experimental conditions are the subsets of an experiment that define the relevant experimental manipulation.

CONTRASTS

You must specify conditions before you can define contrasts.


In the Cognitive Atlas, we define a contrast as any function over experimental conditions. The simplest contrast is the indicator value for a specific condition; more complex contrasts include linear or nonlinear functions of the indicator across different experimental conditions.

INDICATORS

No indicators have yet been associated.

An indicator is a specific quantitative or qualitative variable that is recorded for analysis. These may include behavioral variables (such as response time, accuracy, or other measures of performance) or physiological variables (including genetics, psychophysiology, or brain imaging data).

Term BIBLIOGRAPHY