van Maanen Leendert
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam.
Top Cogn Sci. 2016 Jan;8(1):279-90. doi: 10.1111/tops.12182. Epub 2016 Jan 8.
The speed-accuracy trade-off (SAT) effect refers to the behavioral trade-off between fast yet error-prone respones and accurate but slow responses. Multiple theories on the cognitive mechanisms behind SAT exist. One theory assumes that SAT is a consequence of strategically adjusting the amount of evidence required for overt behaviors, such as perceptual choices. Another theory hypothesizes that SAT is the consequence of the mixture of multiple categorically different cognitive processes. In this paper, these theories are disambiguated by assessing whether the fixed-point property of mixture distributions holds, in both simulations and data. I conclude that, at least for perceptual decision making, there is no evidence for a mixture of different cognitive processes to trade off accuracy of responding for speed.
速度-准确性权衡(SAT)效应指的是在快速但容易出错的反应与准确但缓慢的反应之间的行为权衡。关于SAT背后的认知机制存在多种理论。一种理论认为,SAT是策略性地调整诸如感知选择等外显行为所需证据量的结果。另一种理论假设,SAT是多种完全不同的认知过程混合的结果。在本文中,通过在模拟和数据中评估混合分布的定点属性是否成立,对这些理论进行了区分。我得出的结论是,至少对于感知决策而言,没有证据表明不同认知过程的混合会以反应速度换取反应准确性。