کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
916854 | 1473386 | 2015 | 49 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
• We manipulated the post-choice availability of a stimulus in a perceptual choice followed by confidence paradigm.
• Resolution of confidence and the time pressure effect were higher under better perceptual availability conditions.
• Confidence is formed based on information that is collected during a post-choice stage, in support of dual-stage theories.
• We present a augmented list of robust empirical hurdles involving RT2 to guide future modeling attempts.
• We present a novel dual stage model of confidence and its latency featuring a collapsing boundary for confidence.
Confidence judgments are pivotal in the performance of daily tasks and in many domains of scientific research including the behavioral sciences, psychology and neuroscience. Positive resolution i.e., the positive correlation between choice-correctness and choice-confidence is a critical property of confidence judgments, which justifies their ubiquity. In the current paper, we study the mechanism underlying confidence judgments and their resolution by investigating the source of the inputs for the confidence-calculation. We focus on the intriguing debate between two families of confidence theories. According to single stage theories, confidence is based on the same information that underlies the decision (or on some other aspect of the decision process), whereas according to dual stage theories, confidence is affected by novel information that is collected after the decision was made. In three experiments, we support the case for dual stage theories by showing that post-choice perceptual availability manipulations exert a causal effect on confidence-resolution in the decision followed by confidence paradigm. These finding establish the role of RT2, the duration of the post-choice information-integration stage, as a prime dependent variable that theories of confidence should account for. We then present a novel list of robust empirical patterns (‘hurdles’) involving RT2 to guide further theorizing about confidence judgments. Finally, we present a unified computational dual stage model for choice, confidence and their latencies namely, the collapsing confidence boundary model (CCB). According to CCB, a diffusion-process choice is followed by a second evidence-integration stage towards a stochastic collapsing confidence boundary. Despite its simplicity, CCB clears the entire list of hurdles.
Figure optionsDownload as PowerPoint slide
Journal: Cognitive Psychology - Volume 78, May 2015, Pages 99–147