THE DRIVE TO STRIVE: GOAL GENERATION BASED ON CURRENT NEEDS

The drive to strive: goal generation based on current needs

The drive to strive: goal generation based on current needs

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Hungry animals are influenced by a multitude of different factors when foraging for sustenance.Much of the work on animal foraging has focused on factors relating to the amount of time and energy animals expend searching for and harvesting foods.Models that emphasize such factors have been invaluable in determining when it is beneficial for an animal to search for pastures new.When foraging, however, animals also have to determine how to direct their search.

For what food should they forage? There is no point searching for more of a particular food when you are sated from eating it.Here we review work in macaques and humans that has Coffee sought to reveal the neural circuits critical for determining the subjective value of different foods and associated objects in our environment and tracking this value over time.There is mounting evidence that a network composed of the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), amygdala and medial thalamus is critical for linking objects in the environment with food value and adjusting those valuations in real time based on current biological needs.Temporal inactivation studies have revealed that the amygdala and OFC play distinct, but complementary roles in this valuation process.

Such a network for determining the subjective value of different foods and, by extension, associated objects, must interact with systems that determine where and for how long to forage.Only by efficiently incorporating these two factors into their Jumpsuit decisions will animals be able to achieve maximal fitness.

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