4.7 Article

Experienced entropy drives choice behavior in a boring decision-making task

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-06861-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Focus Program Translational Neurosciences Mainz
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG) [CRC 1193, SPP 2041, 347573108, 431393205, CRC 1080]
  3. Israel Science Foundation [757/16]
  4. Gatsby Charitable Foundation
  5. Stiftung Rheinland-Pfalz fur Innovation (MARP program) [961-386261/1080]
  6. Ministry of Science of the state of Rhineland-Palatinate (LIR/DRZ program)
  7. European Union [777084]

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This article discusses the relationship between situational factors and behavioral responses to boredom, finding that humans exhibit a bias in decision-making to avoid more monotonous options, which is correlated with self-reported boredom. Additionally, the entropy in the sequence of individually experienced stimuli is considered a key determinant in predicting choice behavior in the task.
Boredom has been defined as an aversive mental state that is induced by the disability to engage in satisfying activity, most often experienced in monotonous environments. However, current understanding of the situational factors inducing boredom and driving subsequent behavior remains incomplete. Here, we introduce a two-alternative forced-choice task coupled with sensory stimulation of different degrees of monotony. We find that human subjects develop a bias in decision-making, avoiding the more monotonous alternative that is correlated with self-reported state boredom. This finding was replicated in independent laboratory and online experiments and proved to be specific for the induction of boredom rather than curiosity. Furthermore, using theoretical modeling we show that the entropy in the sequence of individually experienced stimuli, a measure of information gain, serves as a major determinant to predict choice behavior in the task. With this, we underline the relevance of boredom for driving behavioral responses that ensure a lasting stream of information to the brain.

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