Publication | Open Access
The impact of learning on perceptual decisions and its implication for speed-accuracy tradeoffs
19
Citations
47
References
2018
Year
Unknown Venue
Bayesian Decision TheoryBehavioral Decision MakingUncertain Sensory EvidenceCognitionAttentionPerceptual LearningSocial SciencesExperimental Decision MakingManagementCognitive NeuroscienceDecision TheoryLearning ProblemPerception SystemBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceNoisy Sensory EvidenceSequential Decision MakingSpeed-accuracy TradeoffsHuman CognitionExperimental PsychologyExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorPerceptual DecisionsLearning TheoryNeuroeconomicsNeuroscienceDecision Science
SUMMARY In standard models of perceptual decision-making, noisy sensory evidence is considered to be the primary source of choice errors and the accumulation of evidence needed to overcome this noise gives rise to speed-accuracy tradeoffs. Here, we investigated how the history of recent choices and their outcomes interacts with these processes using a combination of theory and experiment. We found that the speed and accuracy of performance of rats on olfactory decision tasks could be best explained by a Bayesian model that combines reinforcement-based learning with accumulation of uncertain sensory evidence. This model predicted the specific pattern of trial history effects that were found in the data. The results suggest that learning is a critical factor contributing to speed-accuracy tradeoffs in decision-making and that task history effects are not simply biases but rather the signatures of an optimal learning strategy.
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