Locke Shannon M, Mamassian Pascal, Landy Michael S
Laboratoire des Systèmes Perceptifs, Département d'Études Cognitives, École Normale Supérieure, PSL University, CNRS, 75005 Paris, France; Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, NY, United States.
Laboratoire des Systèmes Perceptifs, Département d'Études Cognitives, École Normale Supérieure, PSL University, CNRS, 75005 Paris, France.
Cognition. 2020 Dec;205:104396. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2020.104396. Epub 2020 Aug 5.
To best interact with the external world, humans are often required to consider the quality of their actions. Sometimes the environment furnishes rewards or punishments to signal action efficacy. However, when such feedback is absent or only partial, we must rely on internally generated signals to evaluate our performance (i.e., metacognition). Yet, very little is known about how humans form such judgements of sensorimotor confidence. Do they monitor their actual performance or do they rely on cues to sensorimotor uncertainty? We investigated sensorimotor metacognition in two visuomotor tracking experiments, where participants followed an unpredictably moving dot cloud with a mouse cursor as it followed a random horizontal trajectory. Their goal was to infer the underlying target generating the dots, track it for several seconds, and then report their confidence in their tracking as better or worse than their average. In Experiment 1, we manipulated task difficulty with two methods: varying the size of the dot cloud and varying the stability of the target's velocity. In Experiment 2, the stimulus statistics were fixed and duration of the stimulus presentation was varied. We found similar levels of metacognitive sensitivity in all experiments, which was evidence against the cue-based strategy. The temporal analysis of metacognitive sensitivity revealed a recency effect, where error later in the trial had a greater influence on the sensorimotor confidence, consistent with a performance-monitoring strategy. From these results, we conclude that humans predominantly monitored their tracking performance, albeit inefficiently, to build a sense of sensorimotor confidence.
为了更好地与外部世界互动,人类常常需要考虑自身行动的质量。有时环境会提供奖励或惩罚来表明行动的成效。然而,当这种反馈缺失或仅部分存在时,我们必须依靠内部产生的信号来评估自己的表现(即元认知)。然而,对于人类如何形成这种感觉运动信心的判断,我们知之甚少。他们是监控自己的实际表现,还是依赖于感觉运动不确定性的线索呢?我们在两个视觉运动跟踪实验中研究了感觉运动元认知,在实验中参与者用鼠标光标跟踪一个随机水平轨迹上不可预测移动的点云。他们的目标是推断产生这些点的潜在目标,跟踪它几秒钟,然后报告他们对自己跟踪表现的信心,判断是高于还是低于平均水平。在实验1中,我们用两种方法操纵任务难度:改变点云的大小和改变目标速度的稳定性。在实验2中,刺激统计数据是固定的,刺激呈现的持续时间是变化的。我们在所有实验中都发现了相似水平的元认知敏感性,这是反对基于线索策略的证据。对元认知敏感性的时间分析揭示了一种近因效应,即试验后期的误差对感觉运动信心有更大影响,这与表现监控策略一致。从这些结果中,我们得出结论,人类主要通过监控自己的跟踪表现(尽管效率不高)来建立感觉运动信心。