TY - JOUR T1 - Computational mechanisms of curiosity and goal-directed exploration JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/411272 SP - 411272 AU - Philipp Schwartenbeck AU - Johannes Passecker AU - Tobias U Hauser AU - Thomas H B FitzGerald AU - Martin Kronbichler AU - Karl Friston Y1 - 2018/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/09/07/411272.abstract N2 - Successful behaviour depends on the right balance between maximising reward and soliciting information about the world. Here, we show how different types of information-gain emerge when casting behaviour as surprise minimisation. We present two distinct mechanisms for goal-directed exploration that express separable profiles of active sampling to reduce uncertainty. ‘Hidden state’ exploration motivates agents to sample unambiguous observations to accurately infer the (hidden) state of the world. Conversely, ‘model parameter’ exploration, compels agents to sample outcomes associated with high uncertainty, if they are informative for their representation of the task structure. We illustrate the emergence of these types of information-gain, termed active inference and active learning, and show how these forms of exploration induce distinct patterns of ‘Bayes-optimal’ behaviour. Our findings provide a computational framework to understand how distinct levels of uncertainty induce different modes of information-gain in decision-making. ER -