Human optional stopping in a heteroscedastic world
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Human optional stopping in a heteroscedastic world. / Tickle, Hannah; Tsetsos, Konstantinos; Speekenbrink, Maarten; Summerfield, Christopher.
In: PSYCHOL REV, Vol. 130, No. 1, 01.2023, p. 1-22.Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journal › SCORING: Review article › Research
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Human optional stopping in a heteroscedastic world
AU - Tickle, Hannah
AU - Tsetsos, Konstantinos
AU - Speekenbrink, Maarten
AU - Summerfield, Christopher
PY - 2023/1
Y1 - 2023/1
N2 - When making decisions, animals must trade off the benefits of information harvesting against the opportunity cost of prolonged deliberation. Deciding when to stop accumulating information and commit to a choice is challenging in natural environments, where the reliability of decision-relevant information may itself vary unpredictably over time (variable variance or "heteroscedasticity"). We asked humans to perform a categorization task in which discrete, continuously valued samples (oriented gratings) arrived in series until the observer made a choice. Human behavior was best described by a model that adaptively weighted sensory signals by their inverse prediction error and integrated the resulting quantities with a linear urgency signal to a decision threshold. This model approximated the output of a Bayesian model that computed the full posterior probability of a correct response, and successfully predicted adaptive weighting of decision information in neural signals. Adaptive weighting of decision information may have evolved to promote optional stopping in heteroscedastic natural environments. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
AB - When making decisions, animals must trade off the benefits of information harvesting against the opportunity cost of prolonged deliberation. Deciding when to stop accumulating information and commit to a choice is challenging in natural environments, where the reliability of decision-relevant information may itself vary unpredictably over time (variable variance or "heteroscedasticity"). We asked humans to perform a categorization task in which discrete, continuously valued samples (oriented gratings) arrived in series until the observer made a choice. Human behavior was best described by a model that adaptively weighted sensory signals by their inverse prediction error and integrated the resulting quantities with a linear urgency signal to a decision threshold. This model approximated the output of a Bayesian model that computed the full posterior probability of a correct response, and successfully predicted adaptive weighting of decision information in neural signals. Adaptive weighting of decision information may have evolved to promote optional stopping in heteroscedastic natural environments. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
U2 - 10.1037/rev0000315
DO - 10.1037/rev0000315
M3 - SCORING: Review article
C2 - 34570524
VL - 130
SP - 1
EP - 22
JO - PSYCHOL REV
JF - PSYCHOL REV
SN - 0033-295X
IS - 1
ER -