Neural evidence accumulation persists after choice to inform metacognitive judgments

Author:

Murphy Peter R12,Robertson Ian H1,Harty Siobhán1,O'Connell Redmond G1

Affiliation:

1. Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience, School of Psychology, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

2. Institute of Psychology, Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands

Abstract

The ability to revise one’s certainty or confidence in a preceding choice is a critical feature of adaptive decision-making but the neural mechanisms underpinning this metacognitive process have yet to be characterized. In the present study, we demonstrate that the same build-to-threshold decision variable signal that triggers an initial choice continues to evolve after commitment, and determines the timing and accuracy of self-initiated error detection reports by selectively representing accumulated evidence that the preceding choice was incorrect. We also show that a peri-choice signal generated in medial frontal cortex provides a source of input to this post-decision accumulation process, indicating that metacognitive judgments are not solely based on the accumulation of feedforward sensory evidence. These findings impart novel insights into the generative mechanisms of metacognition.

Funder

Irish Research Council

European Research Council

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

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

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