» Articles » PMID: 27882927

Global Gain Modulation Generates Time-dependent Urgency During Perceptual Choice in Humans

Overview
Journal Nat Commun
Specialty Biology
Date 2016 Nov 25
PMID 27882927
Citations 75
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Decision-makers must often balance the desire to accumulate information with the costs of protracted deliberation. Optimal, reward-maximizing decision-making can require dynamic adjustment of this speed/accuracy trade-off over the course of a single decision. However, it is unclear whether humans are capable of such time-dependent adjustments. Here, we identify several signatures of time-dependency in human perceptual decision-making and highlight their possible neural source. Behavioural and model-based analyses reveal that subjects respond to deadline-induced speed pressure by lowering their criterion on accumulated perceptual evidence as the deadline approaches. In the brain, this effect is reflected in evidence-independent urgency that pushes decision-related motor preparation signals closer to a fixed threshold. Moreover, we show that global modulation of neural gain, as indexed by task-related fluctuations in pupil diameter, is a plausible biophysical mechanism for the generation of this urgency. These findings establish context-sensitive time-dependency as a critical feature of human decision-making.

Citing Articles

Neural mechanisms of metacognitive improvement under speed pressure.

Stone C, Mattingley J, Rangelov D Commun Biol. 2025; 8(1):223.

PMID: 39939703 PMC: 11821868. DOI: 10.1038/s42003-025-07646-3.


Dissociable Effects of Urgency and Evidence Accumulation during Reaching Revealed by Dynamic Multisensory Integration.

Hoffmann A, Crevecoeur F eNeuro. 2024; 11(12).

PMID: 39542732 PMC: 11628215. DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0262-24.2024.


Pupillary responses to directional uncertainty while intercepting a moving target.

Marquez I, Trevino M R Soc Open Sci. 2024; 11(10):240606.

PMID: 39359460 PMC: 11444787. DOI: 10.1098/rsos.240606.


Prioritized neural processing of social threats during perceptual decision-making.

El Zein M, Mennella R, Sequestro M, Meaux E, Wyart V, Grezes J iScience. 2024; 27(6):109951.

PMID: 38832023 PMC: 11145357. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.109951.


Of Rodents and Primates: Time-Variant Gain in Drift-Diffusion Decision Models.

Asadpour A, Tan H, Lenfesty B, Wong-Lin K Comput Brain Behav. 2024; 7(2):195-206.

PMID: 38798787 PMC: 11111503. DOI: 10.1007/s42113-023-00194-1.


References
1.
Reddi B, Carpenter R . The influence of urgency on decision time. Nat Neurosci. 2000; 3(8):827-30. DOI: 10.1038/77739. View

2.
Smith . Stochastic Dynamic Models of Response Time and Accuracy: A Foundational Primer. J Math Psychol. 2000; 44(3):408-463. DOI: 10.1006/jmps.1999.1260. View

3.
Usher M, McClelland J . The time course of perceptual choice: the leaky, competing accumulator model. Psychol Rev. 2001; 108(3):550-92. DOI: 10.1037/0033-295x.108.3.550. View

4.
Gold J, Shadlen M . Banburismus and the brain: decoding the relationship between sensory stimuli, decisions, and reward. Neuron. 2002; 36(2):299-308. DOI: 10.1016/s0896-6273(02)00971-6. View

5.
Ratcliff R, Tuerlinckx F . Estimating parameters of the diffusion model: approaches to dealing with contaminant reaction times and parameter variability. Psychon Bull Rev. 2002; 9(3):438-81. PMC: 2474747. DOI: 10.3758/bf03196302. View