When uncertain, does human self-motion decision-making fully utilize complete information?

Author:

Clark Torin K.1234,Yi Yongwoo12,Galvan-Garza Raquel C.3,Bermúdez Rey María Carolina12,Merfeld Daniel M.125

Affiliation:

1. Jenks Vestibular Physiology Laboratory, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, Massachusetts

2. Otology and Laryngology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

3. Man-Vehicle Laboratory, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts

4. Aerospace Engineering Sciences, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, Colorado

5. Biomedical Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio

Abstract

When forced to choose humans often feel uncertain. Investigations of human perceptual decision-making often employ signal detection theory, which assumes that even when uncertain all available information is fully utilized. However, other studies have suggested or assumed that, when uncertain, human subjects guess totally at random, ignoring available information. When uncertain, do humans simply guess totally at random? Or do humans fully utilize complete information? Or does behavior fall between these two extremes yielding “above chance” performance without fully utilizing complete information? While it is often assumed complete information is fully utilized, even when uncertain, to our knowledge this has never been experimentally confirmed. To answer this question, we combined numerical simulations, theoretical analyses, and human studies performed using a self-motion direction-recognition perceptual decision-making task (did I rotate left or right?). Subjects were instructed to make forced-choice binary (left/right) and trinary (left/right/uncertain) decisions when cued following each stimulus. Our results show that humans 1) do not guess at random when uncertain and 2) make binary and trinary decisions equally well. These findings show that humans fully utilize complete information when uncertain for our perceptual decision-making task. This helps unify signal detection theory and other models of forced-choice decision-making which allow for uncertain responses. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Humans make many perceptual decisions every day. But what if we are uncertain? While many studies assume that humans fully utilize complete information, other studies have suggested and/or assumed that when we're uncertain and forced to decide, information is not fully utilized. While humans tend to perform above chance when uncertain, no earlier study has tested whether available information is fully utilized. Our results show that humans make fully informed decisions even when uncertain.

Funder

National Space Biomedical Research Institute

National Institute of Deafness and Other Communications Disorders

NASA Space Technology Research Fellowship

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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