Rats and Humans Can Optimally Accumulate Evidence for Decision-Making
Princeton University · Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Abstract
The gradual and noisy accumulation of evidence is a fundamental component of decision-making, with noise playing a key role as the source of variability and errors. However, the origins of this noise have never been determined. We developed decision-making tasks in which sensory evidence is delivered in randomly timed pulses, and analyzed the resulting data with models that use the richly detailed information of each trial's pulse timing to distinguish between different decision-making mechanisms. This analysis allowed measurement of the magnitude of noise in the accumulator's memory, separately from noise associated with incoming sensory evidence. In our tasks, the accumulator's memory was noiseless, for both…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.58
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 27
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Accumulator (cryptography)
- Sensory system
- Noise (video)
- Computer science
- Contrast (vision)
- Cognitive psychology
- Neuroscience
- Artificial intelligence
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions