» Articles » PMID: 15631590

A Ballistic Model of Choice Response Time

Overview
Journal Psychol Rev
Specialty Psychology
Date 2005 Jan 6
PMID 15631590
Citations 67
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Almost all models of response time (RT) use a stochastic accumulation process. To account for the benchmark RT phenomena, researchers have found it necessary to include between-trial variability in the starting point and/or the rate of accumulation, both in linear (R. Ratcliff & J. N. Rouder, 1998) and nonlinear (M. Usher & J. L. McClelland, 2001) models. The authors show that a ballistic (deterministic within-trial) model using a simplified version of M. Usher and J. L. McClelland's (2001) nonlinear accumulation process with between-trial variability in accumulation rate and starting point is capable of accounting for the benchmark behavioral phenomena. The authors successfully fit their model to R. Ratcliff and J. N. Rouder's (1998) data, which exhibit many of the benchmark phenomena.

Citing Articles

Human response times are governed by dual anticipatory processes with distinct neural signatures.

Ramayya A, Buch V, Richardson A, Lucas T, Gold J Commun Biol. 2025; 8(1):124.

PMID: 39863697 PMC: 11762298. DOI: 10.1038/s42003-025-07516-y.


The neural network RTNet exhibits the signatures of human perceptual decision-making.

Rafiei F, Shekhar M, Rahnev D Nat Hum Behav. 2024; 8(9):1752-1770.

PMID: 38997452 DOI: 10.1038/s41562-024-01914-8.


EZ-CDM: Fast, simple, robust, and accurate estimation of circular diffusion model parameters.

Qarehdaghi H, Rad J Psychon Bull Rev. 2024; 31(5):2058-2091.

PMID: 38587755 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-024-02483-7.


Are there jumps in evidence accumulation, and what, if anything, do they reflect psychologically? An analysis of Lévy Flights models of decision-making.

Rasanan A, Rad J, Sewell D Psychon Bull Rev. 2023; 31(1):32-48.

PMID: 37528276 PMC: 11420318. DOI: 10.3758/s13423-023-02284-4.


"Reliable organisms from unreliable components" revisited: the linear drift, linear infinitesimal variance model of decision making.

Smith P Psychon Bull Rev. 2023; 30(4):1323-1359.

PMID: 36720804 PMC: 10482797. DOI: 10.3758/s13423-022-02237-3.