Abstract
AbstractPerceptual confidence is an evaluation of the validity of perceptual decisions. While there is behavioural evidence that confidence evaluation differs from perceptual decision-making, disentangling these two processes remains a challenge at the neural level. Here we examined the electrical brain activity of human participants in a protracted perceptual decision-making task where observers tend to commit to perceptual decisions early whilst continuing to monitor sensory evidence for evaluating confidence. Premature decision commitments were revealed by patterns of spectral power overlying motor cortex, followed by an attenuation of the neural representation of perceptual decision evidence. A distinct neural representation was associated with the computation of confidence, with sources localised in the superior parietal and orbitofrontal cortices. In agreement with a dissociation between perception and confidence, these neural resources were recruited even after observers committed to their perceptual decisions, and thus delineate an integral neural circuit for evaluating perceptual decision confidence.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference72 articles.
1. Acerbi, L. , & Ma, W. J . Practical Bayesian optimization for model fitting with Bayesian adaptive direct search. In Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, December 2017; 1836–1846
2. What failure in collective decision-making tells us about metacognition
3. Electromagnetic brain mapping;IEEE Signal Processing Magazine,2001
4. Structural basis of transmembrane coupling of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein
5. Sensory noise increases metacognitive efficiency;Journal of Experimental Psychology: General,2019