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Пишет bioRxiv Subject Collection: Neuroscience ([info]syn_bx_neuro)
@ 2024-11-27 02:34:00


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Metacognitive Introspection Alters the Dynamics of Pre-Decisional Neural Evidence Accumulation
Metacognitive introspection refers to the capacity to monitor and evaluate one's own performance, such as when expressing confidence in one's choice. In the context of perceptual decision making, current computational models of confidence typically assume that confidence is computed after the evidence collection process underlying the initial choice has unfolded. This account predicts that the act of introspection required in order to provide a confidence judgment about one's decision should have little impact on the dynamics of evidence accumulation leading up to that decision. We tested this by examining whether a neural proxy for perceptual evidence accumulation (the central-parietal positivity; CPP) exhibits different dynamics when participants do or do not rate confidence in their perceptual decisions. Behavioral results showed that confidence introspection increased decision accuracy and response time. Importantly, confidence introspection also resulted in a steeper CPP slope beginning shortly after (~250 ms) decision evidence was available. We further observed an effector-specific neural signal of confidence evidence which both built up prior to the perceptual choice and which was predictive of the amount of confidence subsequently expressed by the participants. Our results indicate that introspection can alter the dynamics of perceptual evidence accumulation, possibly by acting on the gain of evidence accumulation, and that motor-related confidence signals emerge in tandem with pre-decisional evidence accumulation signals rather than post-choice.


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