Distinct Motivations to Seek out Information in Healthy Individuals and Problem Gamblers
Overview
Public Health
Affiliations
As massive amounts of information are becoming available to people, understanding the mechanisms underlying information-seeking is more pertinent today than ever. In this study, we investigate the underlying motivations to seek out information in healthy and addicted individuals. We developed a novel decision-making task and a novel computational model which allows dissociating the relative contribution of two motivating factors to seek out information: a desire for novelty and a general desire for knowledge. To investigate whether/how the motivations to seek out information vary between healthy and addicted individuals, in addition to healthy controls we included a sample of individuals with gambling disorder-a form of addiction without the confound of substance consumption and characterized by compulsive gambling. Our results indicate that healthy subjects and problem gamblers adopt distinct information-seeking "modes". Healthy information-seeking behavior was mostly motivated by a desire for novelty. Problem gamblers, on the contrary, displayed reduced novelty-seeking and an increased desire for accumulating knowledge compared to healthy controls. Our findings not only shed new light on the motivations driving healthy and addicted individuals to seek out information, but they also have important implications for the treatment and diagnosis of behavioral addiction.
Torunsky N, Kedrick K, Vilares I Sci Rep. 2025; 15(1):6096.
PMID: 39971991 PMC: 11840097. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-89781-9.
Three diverse motives for information sharing.
Vellani V, Glickman M, Sharot T Commun Psychol. 2024; 2(1):107.
PMID: 39506099 PMC: 11541573. DOI: 10.1038/s44271-024-00144-y.
Multiple and subject-specific roles of uncertainty in reward-guided decision-making.
Paunov A, LHotellier M, Guo D, He Z, Yu A, Meyniel F bioRxiv. 2024; .
PMID: 38585958 PMC: 10996615. DOI: 10.1101/2024.03.27.587016.
People adaptively use information to improve their internal states and external outcomes.
Cogliati Dezza I, Maher C, Sharot T Cognition. 2022; 228:105224.
PMID: 35850045 PMC: 10510028. DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2022.105224.
Independent and interacting value systems for reward and information in the human brain.
Cogliati Dezza I, Cleeremans A, Alexander W Elife. 2022; 11.
PMID: 35416151 PMC: 9064296. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.66358.