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Evidence against perfect integration of sensory information during perceptual decision making


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Title:
Evidence against perfect integration of sensory information during perceptual decision making
Authors:
Carland, Matthew A.
Marcos, Encarni  
Thura, David
Cisek, Paul  
Editor:
American Physiological Society
Issue Date:
2015
URI:
https://hdl.handle.net/11000/39210
Abstract:
Perceptual decision making is often modeled as perfect integration of sequential sensory samples until the accumulated total reaches a fixed decision bound. In that view, the buildup of neural activity during perceptual decision making is attributed to temporal integration. However, an alternative explanation is that sensory estimates are computed quickly with a low-pass filter and combined with a growing signal reflecting the urgency to respond and it is the latter that is primarily responsible for neural activity buildup. These models are difficult to distinguish empirically because they make similar predictions for tasks in which sensory information is constant within a trial, as in most previous studies. Here we presented subjects with a variant of the classic constant-coherence motion discrimination (CMD) task in which we inserted brief motion pulses. We examined the effect of these pulses on reaction times (RTs) in two conditions: 1) when the CMD trials were blocked and subjects responded quickly and 2) when the same CMD trials were interleaved among trials of a variable-motion coherence task that motivated slower decisions. In the blocked condition, early pulses had a strong effect on RTs but late pulses did not, consistent with both models. However, when subjects slowed their decision policy in the interleaved condition, later pulses now became effective while early pulses lost their efficacy. This last result contradicts models based on perfect integration of sensory evidence and implies that motion signals are processed with a strong leak, equivalent to a low-pass filter with a short time constant.
Keywords/Subjects:
decision making
drift-diffusion model
urgency
Knowledge area:
CDU: Ciencias aplicadas: Medicina
Type of document:
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Access rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DOI:
10.1152/jn.00264.2015
Published in:
J Neurophysiol. 2016 Feb 1;115(2):915-30
Appears in Collections:
Instituto de Neurociencias



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