Drugowitsch Jan, Moreno-Bote Rubén, Pouget Alexandre
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, United States of America; Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, École Normale Supérieure, Paris, France; Département des Neurosciences Fondamentales, Université de Genève, Geneva, Switzerland.
Research Unit, Parc Sanitari Sant Joan de Déu and Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental (CIBERSAM), Barcelona, Spain.
PLoS One. 2014 May 9;9(5):e96511. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0096511. eCollection 2014.
In an uncertain and ambiguous world, effective decision making requires that subjects form and maintain a belief about the correctness of their choices, a process called meta-cognition. Prediction of future outcomes and self-monitoring are only effective if belief closely matches behavioral performance. Equality between belief and performance is also critical for experimentalists to gain insight into the subjects' belief by simply measuring their performance. Assuming that the decision maker holds the correct model of the world, one might indeed expect that belief and performance should go hand in hand. Unfortunately, we show here that this is rarely the case when performance is defined as the percentage of correct responses for a fixed stimulus, a standard definition in psychophysics. In this case, belief equals performance only for a very narrow family of tasks, whereas in others they will only be very weakly correlated. As we will see it is possible to restore this equality in specific circumstances but this remedy is only effective for a decision-maker, not for an experimenter. We furthermore show that belief and performance do not match when conditioned on task difficulty--as is common practice when plotting the psychometric curve--highlighting common pitfalls in previous neuroscience work. Finally, we demonstrate that miscalibration and the hard-easy effect observed in humans' and other animals' certainty judgments could be explained by a mismatch between the experimenter's and decision maker's expected distribution of task difficulties. These results have important implications for experimental design and are of relevance for theories that aim to unravel the nature of meta-cognition.
在一个不确定且模糊的世界中,有效的决策需要主体形成并维持对自身选择正确性的信念,这一过程称为元认知。只有当信念与行为表现紧密匹配时,对未来结果的预测和自我监控才会有效。信念与表现之间的平等对于实验者通过简单测量主体的表现来洞察其信念也至关重要。假设决策者持有正确的世界模型,人们可能确实会期望信念和表现应该齐头并进。不幸的是,我们在此表明,当将表现定义为对固定刺激的正确反应百分比时(这是心理物理学中的标准定义),情况很少如此。在这种情况下,信念仅在非常狭窄的一类任务中等于表现,而在其他任务中它们之间的相关性将非常弱。正如我们将看到的,在特定情况下有可能恢复这种平等,但这种补救措施仅对决策者有效,而对实验者无效。我们还表明,当以任务难度为条件时(这是绘制心理测量曲线时的常见做法),信念和表现不匹配,这突出了先前神经科学工作中常见的陷阱。最后,我们证明,在人类和其他动物的确定性判断中观察到的校准错误和难易效应可以通过实验者和决策者预期的任务难度分布之间的不匹配来解释。这些结果对实验设计具有重要意义,并且与旨在揭示元认知本质的理论相关。