Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London, WC1N 3AZ, United Kingdom
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London, WC1N 3AZ, United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 2022 Apr 27;42(17):3622-3635. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1326-21.2022. Epub 2022 Mar 18.
Metacognition describes the process of monitoring one's own mental states, often for the purpose of cognitive control. Previous research has investigated how metacognitive signals are generated (metacognitive monitoring), for example, when people (both female/male) judge their confidence in their decisions and memories. Research has also investigated how metacognitive signals are used to influence behavior (metacognitive control), for example, setting a reminder (i.e., cognitive offloading) for something you are not confident you will remember. However, the mapping between metacognitive monitoring and metacognitive control needs further study on a neural level. We used fMRI to investigate a delayed-intentions task with a reminder element, allowing human participants to use their metacognitive insight to engage metacognitive control. Using multivariate pattern analysis, we found that we could separately decode both monitoring and control, and, to a lesser extent, cross-classify between them. Therefore, brain patterns associated with monitoring and control are partially, but not fully, overlapping. Models of metacognition commonly distinguish between monitoring (how metacognition is formed) and control (how metacognition is used for behavioral regulation). Research into these facets of metacognition has often happened in isolation. Here, we provide a study which directly investigates the mapping between metacognitive monitoring and metacognitive control at a neural level. We applied multivariate pattern analysis to fMRI data from a novel task in which participants separately rated their confidence (metacognitive monitoring) and how much they would like to use a reminder (metacognitive control). We find support for the notion that the two aspects of metacognition overlap partially but not fully. We argue that future research should focus on how different metacognitive signals are selected for control.
元认知描述了监控自身心理状态的过程,通常是为了进行认知控制。先前的研究已经调查了元认知信号是如何产生的(元认知监控),例如,当人们(无论男女)判断自己对决策和记忆的信心时。研究还调查了元认知信号如何用于影响行为(元认知控制),例如,为您不太确定会记住的事情设置提醒(即认知卸载)。然而,元认知监控和元认知控制之间的映射需要在神经水平上进一步研究。我们使用 fMRI 研究了一项具有提醒元素的延迟意图任务,使人类参与者能够利用他们的元认知洞察力来进行元认知控制。使用多元模式分析,我们发现我们可以分别解码监控和控制,并且在较小程度上,可以在它们之间进行交叉分类。因此,与监控和控制相关的大脑模式部分重叠,但不是完全重叠。元认知模型通常区分监控(元认知如何形成)和控制(元认知如何用于行为调节)。这些元认知方面的研究经常是孤立进行的。在这里,我们提供了一项直接在神经水平上研究元认知监控和元认知控制之间映射的研究。我们将多元模式分析应用于一项新颖任务的 fMRI 数据,参与者在该任务中分别评估自己的信心(元认知监控)和使用提醒的意愿(元认知控制)。我们发现,元认知的两个方面部分重叠但不是完全重叠的观点得到了支持。我们认为,未来的研究应该集中在如何为控制选择不同的元认知信号。