Qualitative Speed-accuracy Tradeoff Effects That Cannot Be Explained by the Diffusion Model Under the Selective Influence Assumption
Authors
Affiliations
It is often thought that the diffusion model explains all effects related to the speed-accuracy tradeoff (SAT) but this has previously been examined with only a few SAT conditions or only a few subjects. Here we collected data from 20 subjects who performed a perceptual discrimination task with five different difficulty levels and five different SAT conditions (5000 trials/subject). We found that the five SAT conditions produced robustly U-shaped curves for (i) the difference between error and correct response times (RTs), (ii) the ratio of the standard deviation and mean of the RT distributions, and (iii) the skewness of the RT distributions. Critically, the diffusion model where only drift rate varies with contrast and only boundary varies with SAT could not account for any of the three U-shaped curves. Further, allowing all parameters to vary across conditions revealed that both the SAT and difficulty manipulations resulted in substantial modulations in every model parameter, while still providing imperfect fits to the data. These findings demonstrate that the diffusion model cannot fully explain the effects of SAT and establishes three robust but challenging effects that models of SAT should account for.
A low-dimensional approximation of optimal confidence.
Le Denmat P, Verguts T, Desender K PLoS Comput Biol. 2024; 20(7):e1012273.
PMID: 39047032 PMC: 11299811. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012273.
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.
Secondary motor integration as a final arbiter in sensorimotor decision-making.
Balsdon T, Verdonck S, Loossens T, Philiastides M PLoS Biol. 2023; 21(7):e3002200.
PMID: 37459392 PMC: 10393169. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002200.
What mechanisms mediate prior probability effects on rapid-choice decision-making?.
Puri R, Hinder M, Heathcote A PLoS One. 2023; 18(7):e0288085.
PMID: 37418378 PMC: 10328325. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0288085.
Soghoyan G, Aksiotis V, Rusinova A, Myachykov A, Tumyalis A PLoS One. 2022; 17(9):e0273234.
PMID: 36083888 PMC: 9462575. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0273234.