Choices change the temporal weighting of decision evidence

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Choices change the temporal weighting of decision evidence. / Talluri, Bharath Chandra; Urai, Anne E; Bronfman, Zohar Z; Brezis, Noam; Tsetsos, Konstantinos; Usher, Marius; Donner, Tobias H.

In: J NEUROPHYSIOL, Vol. 125, No. 4, 01.04.2021, p. 1468-1481.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Talluri, BC, Urai, AE, Bronfman, ZZ, Brezis, N, Tsetsos, K, Usher, M & Donner, TH 2021, 'Choices change the temporal weighting of decision evidence', J NEUROPHYSIOL, vol. 125, no. 4, pp. 1468-1481. https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00462.2020

APA

Talluri, B. C., Urai, A. E., Bronfman, Z. Z., Brezis, N., Tsetsos, K., Usher, M., & Donner, T. H. (2021). Choices change the temporal weighting of decision evidence. J NEUROPHYSIOL, 125(4), 1468-1481. https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00462.2020

Vancouver

Talluri BC, Urai AE, Bronfman ZZ, Brezis N, Tsetsos K, Usher M et al. Choices change the temporal weighting of decision evidence. J NEUROPHYSIOL. 2021 Apr 1;125(4):1468-1481. https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00462.2020

Bibtex

@article{a94bd006a8d441af98867dafbe7155eb,
title = "Choices change the temporal weighting of decision evidence",
abstract = "Many decisions result from the accumulation of decision-relevant information (evidence) over time. Even when maximizing decision accuracy requires weighting all the evidence equally, decision-makers often give stronger weight to evidence occurring early or late in the evidence stream. Here, we show changes in such temporal biases within participants as a function of intermittent judgments about parts of the evidence stream. Human participants performed a decision task that required a continuous estimation of the mean evidence at the end of the stream. The evidence was either perceptual (noisy random dot motion) or symbolic (variable sequences of numbers). Participants also reported a categorical judgment of the preceding evidence half-way through the stream in one condition or executed an evidence-independent motor response in another condition. The relative impact of early versus late evidence on the final estimation flipped between these two conditions. In particular, participants' sensitivity to late evidence after the intermittent judgment, but not the simple motor response, was decreased. Both the intermittent response as well as the final estimation reports were accompanied by nonluminance-mediated increases of pupil diameter. These pupil dilations were bigger during intermittent judgments than simple motor responses and bigger during estimation when the late evidence was consistent than inconsistent with the initial judgment. In sum, decisions activate pupil-linked arousal systems and alter the temporal weighting of decision evidence. Our results are consistent with the idea that categorical choices in the face of uncertainty induce a change in the state of the neural circuits underlying decision-making.NEW & NOTEWORTHY The psychology and neuroscience of decision-making have extensively studied the accumulation of decision-relevant information toward a categorical choice. Much fewer studies have assessed the impact of a choice on the processing of subsequent information. Here, we show that intermittent choices during a protracted stream of input reduce the sensitivity to subsequent decision information and transiently boost arousal. Choices might trigger a state change in the neural machinery for decision-making.",
keywords = "Adult, Decision Making/physiology, Humans, Judgment/physiology, Mathematical Concepts, Motion Perception/physiology, Psychomotor Performance/physiology, Psychophysics, Pupil/physiology, Space Perception/physiology, Young Adult",
author = "Talluri, {Bharath Chandra} and Urai, {Anne E} and Bronfman, {Zohar Z} and Noam Brezis and Konstantinos Tsetsos and Marius Usher and Donner, {Tobias H}",
year = "2021",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1152/jn.00462.2020",
language = "English",
volume = "125",
pages = "1468--1481",
journal = "J NEUROPHYSIOL",
issn = "0022-3077",
publisher = "American Physiological Society",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Choices change the temporal weighting of decision evidence

AU - Talluri, Bharath Chandra

AU - Urai, Anne E

AU - Bronfman, Zohar Z

AU - Brezis, Noam

AU - Tsetsos, Konstantinos

AU - Usher, Marius

AU - Donner, Tobias H

PY - 2021/4/1

Y1 - 2021/4/1

N2 - Many decisions result from the accumulation of decision-relevant information (evidence) over time. Even when maximizing decision accuracy requires weighting all the evidence equally, decision-makers often give stronger weight to evidence occurring early or late in the evidence stream. Here, we show changes in such temporal biases within participants as a function of intermittent judgments about parts of the evidence stream. Human participants performed a decision task that required a continuous estimation of the mean evidence at the end of the stream. The evidence was either perceptual (noisy random dot motion) or symbolic (variable sequences of numbers). Participants also reported a categorical judgment of the preceding evidence half-way through the stream in one condition or executed an evidence-independent motor response in another condition. The relative impact of early versus late evidence on the final estimation flipped between these two conditions. In particular, participants' sensitivity to late evidence after the intermittent judgment, but not the simple motor response, was decreased. Both the intermittent response as well as the final estimation reports were accompanied by nonluminance-mediated increases of pupil diameter. These pupil dilations were bigger during intermittent judgments than simple motor responses and bigger during estimation when the late evidence was consistent than inconsistent with the initial judgment. In sum, decisions activate pupil-linked arousal systems and alter the temporal weighting of decision evidence. Our results are consistent with the idea that categorical choices in the face of uncertainty induce a change in the state of the neural circuits underlying decision-making.NEW & NOTEWORTHY The psychology and neuroscience of decision-making have extensively studied the accumulation of decision-relevant information toward a categorical choice. Much fewer studies have assessed the impact of a choice on the processing of subsequent information. Here, we show that intermittent choices during a protracted stream of input reduce the sensitivity to subsequent decision information and transiently boost arousal. Choices might trigger a state change in the neural machinery for decision-making.

AB - Many decisions result from the accumulation of decision-relevant information (evidence) over time. Even when maximizing decision accuracy requires weighting all the evidence equally, decision-makers often give stronger weight to evidence occurring early or late in the evidence stream. Here, we show changes in such temporal biases within participants as a function of intermittent judgments about parts of the evidence stream. Human participants performed a decision task that required a continuous estimation of the mean evidence at the end of the stream. The evidence was either perceptual (noisy random dot motion) or symbolic (variable sequences of numbers). Participants also reported a categorical judgment of the preceding evidence half-way through the stream in one condition or executed an evidence-independent motor response in another condition. The relative impact of early versus late evidence on the final estimation flipped between these two conditions. In particular, participants' sensitivity to late evidence after the intermittent judgment, but not the simple motor response, was decreased. Both the intermittent response as well as the final estimation reports were accompanied by nonluminance-mediated increases of pupil diameter. These pupil dilations were bigger during intermittent judgments than simple motor responses and bigger during estimation when the late evidence was consistent than inconsistent with the initial judgment. In sum, decisions activate pupil-linked arousal systems and alter the temporal weighting of decision evidence. Our results are consistent with the idea that categorical choices in the face of uncertainty induce a change in the state of the neural circuits underlying decision-making.NEW & NOTEWORTHY The psychology and neuroscience of decision-making have extensively studied the accumulation of decision-relevant information toward a categorical choice. Much fewer studies have assessed the impact of a choice on the processing of subsequent information. Here, we show that intermittent choices during a protracted stream of input reduce the sensitivity to subsequent decision information and transiently boost arousal. Choices might trigger a state change in the neural machinery for decision-making.

KW - Adult

KW - Decision Making/physiology

KW - Humans

KW - Judgment/physiology

KW - Mathematical Concepts

KW - Motion Perception/physiology

KW - Psychomotor Performance/physiology

KW - Psychophysics

KW - Pupil/physiology

KW - Space Perception/physiology

KW - Young Adult

U2 - 10.1152/jn.00462.2020

DO - 10.1152/jn.00462.2020

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 33689508

VL - 125

SP - 1468

EP - 1481

JO - J NEUROPHYSIOL

JF - J NEUROPHYSIOL

SN - 0022-3077

IS - 4

ER -