Dynamic influences on static measures of metacognition

  • Kobe Desender
  • Luc Vermeylen
  • Tom Verguts

Abstract

Humans differ in their capability to judge choice accuracy via confidence judgments. Popular signal detection theoretic measures of metacognition, such as M-ratio, do not consider the dynamics of decision making. This can be problematic if response caution is shifted to alter the tradeoff between speed and accuracy. Such shifts could induce unaccounted-for sources of variation in the assessment of metacognition. Instead, evidence accumulation frameworks consider decision making, including the computation of confidence, as a dynamic process unfolding over time. Using simulations, we show a relation between response caution and M-ratio. We then show the same pattern in human participants explicitly instructed to focus on speed or accuracy. Finally, this association between M-ratio and response caution is also present across four datasets without any reference towards speed. In contrast, when data are analyzed with a dynamic measure of metacognition, v-ratio, there is no effect of speed-accuracy tradeoff.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer4208
ISSN2041-1723
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 21.07.2022

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

© 2022. The Author(s).

PubMed 35864100