Graduate School of Neural and Behavioural Sciences, International Max Planck Research School, 72074 Tuebingen, Germany.
University of Tuebingen, Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, 72076 Tuebingen, Germany, and.
J Neurosci. 2018 Oct 10;38(41):8874-8888. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0735-18.2018. Epub 2018 Aug 31.
During perceptual decisions, subjects often rely more strongly on early, rather than late, sensory evidence, even in tasks when both are equally informative about the correct decision. This early psychophysical weighting has been explained by an integration-to-bound decision process, in which the stimulus is ignored after the accumulated evidence reaches a certain bound, or confidence level. Here, we derive predictions about how the average temporal weighting of the evidence depends on a subject's decision confidence in this model. To test these predictions empirically, we devised a method to infer decision confidence from pupil size in 2 male monkeys performing a disparity discrimination task. Our animals' data confirmed the integration-to-bound predictions, with different internal decision bounds and different levels of correlation between pupil size and decision confidence accounting for differences between animals. However, the data were less compatible with two alternative accounts for early psychophysical weighting: attractor dynamics either within the decision area or due to feedback to sensory areas, or a feedforward account due to neuronal response adaptation. This approach also opens the door to using confidence more broadly when studying the neural basis of decision making. An animal's ability to adjust decisions based on its level of confidence, sometimes referred to as "metacognition," has generated substantial interest in neuroscience. Here, we show how measurements of pupil diameter in macaques can be used to infer their confidence. This technique opens the door to more neurophysiological studies of confidence because it eliminates the need for training on behavioral paradigms to evaluate confidence. We then use this technique to test predictions from competing explanations of why subjects in perceptual decision making often rely more strongly on early evidence: the way in which the strength of this effect should depend on a subject's decision confidence. We find that a bounded decision formation process best explains our empirical data.
在感知决策过程中,即使在两种信息都同等程度地有助于正确决策的任务中,被试通常也更依赖于早期的、而不是晚期的感觉证据。这种早期的心理物理权重已经被一种整合到边界的决策过程所解释,在这个过程中,当累积的证据达到一定的边界或置信水平后,刺激就会被忽略。在这里,我们根据这个模型推导出了关于证据的平均时间权重如何取决于被试决策信心的预测。为了从经验上检验这些预测,我们设计了一种从 2 只雄性猕猴在执行视差辨别任务时的瞳孔大小推断决策信心的方法。我们的动物数据证实了整合到边界的预测,不同的内部决策边界和瞳孔大小与决策信心之间的不同相关性解释了动物之间的差异。然而,数据与早期心理物理权重的两种替代解释不太一致:决策区域内的吸引子动力学或由于反馈到感觉区域,或由于神经元反应适应的前馈解释。这种方法还为在研究决策的神经基础时更广泛地使用信心打开了大门。动物根据其信心水平调整决策的能力,有时被称为“元认知”,在神经科学中引起了极大的兴趣。在这里,我们展示了如何使用猕猴的瞳孔直径测量来推断它们的信心。这项技术为更深入的信心神经生理学研究打开了大门,因为它消除了在评估信心时需要在行为范式上进行训练的需求。然后,我们使用这项技术来检验为什么在感知决策中,被试通常更依赖于早期证据的竞争解释的预测:这种效果的强度应该如何取决于被试的决策信心。我们发现,有界决策形成过程最能解释我们的经验数据。