TY - JOUR
T1 - The influence of evidence volatility on choice, reaction time and confidence in a perceptual decision
AU - Zylberberg, Ariel
AU - Fetsch, Christopher R.
AU - Shadlen, Michael N.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Human Frontier Science Program and the National Eye Institute (R01 EY11378).
Publisher Copyright:
© Zylberberg et al.
PY - 2016/10/27
Y1 - 2016/10/27
N2 - Many decisions are thought to arise via the accumulation of noisy evidence to a threshold or bound. In perception, the mechanism explains the effect of stimulus strength, characterized by signal-to-noise ratio, on decision speed, accuracy and confidence. It also makes intriguing predictions about the noise itself. An increase in noise should lead to faster decisions, reduced accuracy and, paradoxically, higher confidence. To test these predictions, we introduce a novel sensory manipulation that mimics the addition of unbiased noise to motion-selective regions of visual cortex, which we verified with neuronal recordings from macaque areas MT/MST. For both humans and monkeys, increasing the noise induced faster decisions and greater confidence over a range of stimuli for which accuracy was minimally impaired. The magnitude of the effects was in agreement with predictions of a bounded evidence accumulation model.
AB - Many decisions are thought to arise via the accumulation of noisy evidence to a threshold or bound. In perception, the mechanism explains the effect of stimulus strength, characterized by signal-to-noise ratio, on decision speed, accuracy and confidence. It also makes intriguing predictions about the noise itself. An increase in noise should lead to faster decisions, reduced accuracy and, paradoxically, higher confidence. To test these predictions, we introduce a novel sensory manipulation that mimics the addition of unbiased noise to motion-selective regions of visual cortex, which we verified with neuronal recordings from macaque areas MT/MST. For both humans and monkeys, increasing the noise induced faster decisions and greater confidence over a range of stimuli for which accuracy was minimally impaired. The magnitude of the effects was in agreement with predictions of a bounded evidence accumulation model.
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U2 - 10.7554/eLife.17688
DO - 10.7554/eLife.17688
M3 - Article
C2 - 27787198
AN - SCOPUS:84993949448
SN - 2050-084X
VL - 5
JO - eLife
JF - eLife
IS - OCTOBER2016
M1 - e17688
ER -