Yael Niv

Yael Niv
Occupation(s)Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience
Awards
  • 2012 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers
  • 2015 National Academy of Sciences Troland Research Award
Academic background
Alma materTel-Aviv University; Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Academic work
InstitutionsPrinceton University

Yael Niv is a neuroscientist who studies human and animal reinforcement learning and decision making. She is Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at Princeton University.[1] Niv is known for her research contributions and for her visible advocacy work fighting against gender bias in neuroscience.[2] Niv is founder of biaswatchneuro.com, a website that tracks statistics in an effort to combat sexism in science.[3]

Niv was the recipient of the 2015 National Academy of Sciences Troland Research Award,[4] and the 2012 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers.[5] She was a recipient of an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship in 2010[6] and an Ellison Medical Foundation Scholar in 2011.[7]

Biography

Niv completed a Master of Arts degree at Tel-Aviv University in 2001. Her Master's thesis, was supervised by Daphna Joel and Eytan Ruppin and titled Evolution of Reinforcement Learning in Uncertain Environments.[8] Niv received a Ph.D in Neuroscience at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2008, where she worked under the supervision of Peter Dayan[9] on studies of behavioral control.[10] Her dissertation was titled The Effects of Motivation on Habitual Instrumental Behavior.[11]

After a post-doctoral fellowship at Princeton, Niv joined the faculty of the Princeton Neuroscience Institute and Psychology Department in 2008.[1]

Niv investigates the neural and computational processes underlying reinforcement learning—the ongoing day-to-day processes by which we learn from trial and error to maximize reward and minimize punishment.[12] She studies signals in the brain that may reflect dual-control mechanisms underlying decision making, including an attention system in the prefrontal cortex and a reinforcement learning system in the basal ganglia.[13][14] Niv is interested in normative explanations of behavior and in developing neurocognitive models that offer principled explanations of brain mechanisms and their underlying computational algorithms. She asks in what sense, if at all, neurocomputational algorithms yield optimal decisions. From her perspective, the main goal of computational neuroscience is not to simulate the system, but rather to understand what higher-level computations are instantiated in the brain, and the functionality of these neural computations.[15]

Representative publications

  • Niv, Y. (2009). Reinforcement learning in the brain. Journal of Mathematical Psychology, 53(3), 139-154.
  • Niv, Y. (2019). Learning task-state representations. Nature Neuroscience, 22(10), 1544–1553.
  • Niv, Y. (2021). The primacy of behavioral research for understanding the brain. Behavioral Neuroscience, 135(5), 601–609.
  • Niv, Y., Daniel, R., Geana, A., Gershman, S., Leong, Y. C., Radulescu, A., & Wilson, R. (2015). Reinforcement learning in multidimensional environments relies on attention mechanisms. Journal of Neuroscience, 35(21), 8145–8157.
  • Niv, Y., Daw, N. D., Joel, D., & Dayan, P. (2007). Tonic dopamine: opportunity costs and the control of response vigor. Psychopharmacology, 191(3), 507-520.
  • Niv, Y., Edlund, J. A., Dayan, P., & O'Doherty, J. P. (2012). Neural prediction errors reveal a risk-sensitive reinforcement-learning process in the human brain. Journal of Neuroscience, 32(2), 551-562.

References

  1. ^ a b "Yael Niv | Neuroscience". pni.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  2. ^ Mandavilli, Apoorva (2016-09-05). "Female Scientists Turn to Data to Fight Lack of Representation on Panels (Published 2016)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  3. ^ "How to fight sexism in science". Spectrum | Autism Research News. 2016-11-14. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  4. ^ "Troland Research Awards". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 2020-11-21.
  5. ^ "President Obama Honors Outstanding Early-Career Scientists". whitehouse.gov. 2013-12-23. Retrieved 2020-11-21.
  6. ^ "Past Fellows". sloan.org. Retrieved 2020-11-21.
  7. ^ "Ellison Medical Foundation New Scholars in Aging for 2011 | The Lawrence Ellison Foundation". www.ellisonmedicalfoundation.com. Retrieved 2020-11-21.
  8. ^ Niv, Yael; Joel, Daphna; Meilijson, Isaac; Ruppin, Eytan (2002). "Evolution of Reinforcement Learning in Uncertain Environments: A Simple Explanation for Complex Foraging Behaviors". Adaptive Behavior. 10 (1): 5–24. doi:10.1177/1059-712302-010001-01. ISSN 1059-7123. S2CID 208044692.
  9. ^ "Neurotree - Yael Niv Family Tree". neurotree.org. Retrieved 2020-11-21.
  10. ^ Daw, Nathaniel D; Niv, Yael; Dayan, Peter (2005). "Uncertainty-based competition between prefrontal and dorsolateral striatal systems for behavioral control". Nature Neuroscience. 8 (12): 1704–1711. doi:10.1038/nn1560. ISSN 1097-6256. PMID 16286932. S2CID 16385268.
  11. ^ "The Effects of Motivation on Habitual Instrumental Behavior". CiteSeerX 10.1.1.348.3750.
  12. ^ "Yael Niv". Simons Foundation. 2017-08-16. Retrieved 2020-10-23.
  13. ^ "Yael Niv – Institute for the Study of Decision Making (ISDM) – New York University". Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  14. ^ Daw, Nathaniel D.; Niv, Yael; Dayan, Peter (2005). "Uncertainty-based competition between prefrontal and dorsolateral striatal systems for behavioral control". Nature Neuroscience. 8 (12): 1704–1711. doi:10.1038/nn1560. ISSN 1546-1726. PMID 16286932. S2CID 16385268.
  15. ^ "Yael Niv – Institute for the Study of Decision Making (ISDM) – New York University". Retrieved 2020-12-08.