Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, University College London, London, WC1N 3BG, UK.
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3UD, UK.
Nat Commun. 2022 Jul 22;13(1):4238. doi: 10.1038/s41467-022-31674-w.
Computing confidence in one's own and others' decisions is critical for social success. While there has been substantial progress in our understanding of confidence estimates about oneself, little is known about how people form confidence estimates about others. Here, we address this question by asking participants undergoing fMRI to place bets on perceptual decisions made by themselves or one of three other players of varying ability. We show that participants compute confidence in another player's decisions by combining distinct estimates of player ability and decision difficulty - allowing them to predict that a good player may get a difficult decision wrong and that a bad player may get an easy decision right. We find that this computation is associated with an interaction between brain systems implicated in decision-making (LIP) and theory of mind (TPJ and dmPFC). These results reveal an interplay between self- and other-related processes during a social confidence computation.
对自己和他人决策的信心进行评估对于社交成功至关重要。尽管我们对自己的信心评估有了相当大的理解,但对于人们如何对他人的决策形成信心评估却知之甚少。在这里,我们通过让参与者在 fMRI 扫描下对自己或其他三个不同能力的参与者的感知决策进行下注来解决这个问题。我们表明,参与者通过结合对玩家能力和决策难度的不同评估来计算另一个玩家决策的信心——这使他们能够预测到一个优秀的玩家可能会在困难的决策上犯错,而一个较差的玩家可能会在简单的决策上做对。我们发现,这种计算与涉及决策制定(LIP)和心理理论(TPJ 和 dmPFC)的大脑系统之间的相互作用有关。这些结果揭示了社会信心计算过程中自我和他人相关过程之间的相互作用。