Login / Signup

Simultaneous modeling of choice, confidence, and response time in visual perception.

Sebastian HellmannMichael ZehetleitnerManuel Rausch
Published in: Psychological review (2023)
How can choice, confidence, and response times be modeled simultaneously? Here, we propose the new dynamical weighted evidence and visibility (dynWEV) model, an extension of the drift-diffusion model of decision-making, to account for choices, reaction times, and confidence simultaneously. The decision process in a binary perceptual task is described as a Wiener process accumulating sensory evidence about the choice options bounded by two constant thresholds. To account for confidence judgments, we assume a period of postdecisional accumulation of sensory evidence and parallel accumulation of information about the reliability of the present stimulus. We examined model fits in two experiments, a motion discrimination task with random dot kinematograms and a postmasked orientation discrimination task. A comparison between the dynWEV model, two-stage dynamical signal detection theory, and several versions of race models of decision-making showed that only dynWEV produced acceptable fits of choices, confidence, and reaction time. This finding suggests that confidence judgments depend not only on choice evidence but also on a parallel estimate of stimulus discriminability and postdecisional accumulation of evidence. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
Keyphrases
  • decision making
  • magnetic resonance
  • healthcare
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • emergency department
  • density functional theory
  • working memory
  • computed tomography
  • real time pcr