Judging the difficulty of perceptual decisions

Author:

Löffler Anne123,Zylberberg Ariel12ORCID,Shadlen Michael N1234ORCID,Wolpert Daniel M12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute, Columbia University

2. Department of Neuroscience, Columbia University

3. Kavli Institute for Brain Science, Columbia University

4. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Columbia University

Abstract

Deciding how difficult it is going to be to perform a task allows us to choose between tasks, allocate appropriate resources, and predict future performance. To be useful for planning, difficulty judgments should not require completion of the task. Here, we examine the processes underlying difficulty judgments in a perceptual decision-making task. Participants viewed two patches of dynamic random dots, which were colored blue or yellow stochastically on each appearance. Stimulus coherence (the probability, pblue, of a dot being blue) varied across trials and patches thus establishing difficulty, |pblue −0.5|. Participants were asked to indicate for which patch it would be easier to decide the dominant color. Accuracy in difficulty decisions improved with the difference in the stimulus difficulties, whereas the reaction times were not determined solely by this quantity. For example, when the patches shared the same difficulty, reaction times were shorter for easier stimuli. A comparison of several models of difficulty judgment suggested that participants compare the absolute accumulated evidence from each stimulus and terminate their decision when they differed by a set amount. The model predicts that when the dominant color of each stimulus is known, reaction times should depend only on the difference in difficulty, which we confirm empirically. We also show that this model is preferred to one that compares the confidence one would have in making each decision. The results extend evidence accumulation models, used to explain choice, reaction time, and confidence to prospective judgments of difficulty.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Air Force Office of Scientific Research

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Kavli Institute for Brain Science

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

Reference51 articles.

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2. The hippocampus supports deliberation during value-based decisions;Bakkour;eLife,2019

3. Preschoolers consider expected task difficulty to decide what to do and whom to help;Bennett-Pierre;Cognitive Science,2018

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