One of the most prominent response-time models in cognitive psychology is the diffusion model, which assumes that decision-making is based on a continuous evidence accumulation described by a Wiener diffusion process. In the present paper, we examine two basic assumptions of standard diffusion model analyses. Firstly, we address the question of whether participants adjust their decision thresholds during the decision process. Secondly, we investigate whether so-called Lévy-flights that allow for random jumps in the decision process account better for experimental data than do diffusion models. Specifically, we compare the fit of six different versions of accumulator models to data from four conditions of a number-letter classification task....
The diffusion model (Ratcliff, 1978) allows for the statistical separation of different components o...
model as a form of data analysis for speeded binary de-cisions. The diffusion model assumes that bin...
Over the last four decades, sequential accumulation models for choice response times have spread thr...
We used a diffusion model to examine the effects of response-bias manipulations on response time (RT...
Two similar classes of evidence-accumulation model have dominated theorizing about rapid binary choi...
Diffusion models can be used to infer cognitive processes involved in fast binary decision tasks. Th...
Most current sequential sampling models have random between-trial variability in their parameters. T...
Diffusion models are widely-used and successful accounts of the time course of two-choice decision m...
Diffusion models are widely-used and successful accounts of the time course of two-choice decision m...
Behavioral data obtained with perceptual decision making experiments are typically analyzed with the...
Diffusion models are widely-used and successful accounts of the time course of two-choice decision m...
Response time and accuracy are fundamental measures of behavioral science, but discerning participan...
We present a computational Bayesian approach for Wiener diffusion models, which are prominent accoun...
The Wiener diffusion model (WDM) for 2-alternative tasks assumes that sensory information is integra...
International audienceDrift-diffusion models or DDMs are becoming a standard in the field of computa...
The diffusion model (Ratcliff, 1978) allows for the statistical separation of different components o...
model as a form of data analysis for speeded binary de-cisions. The diffusion model assumes that bin...
Over the last four decades, sequential accumulation models for choice response times have spread thr...
We used a diffusion model to examine the effects of response-bias manipulations on response time (RT...
Two similar classes of evidence-accumulation model have dominated theorizing about rapid binary choi...
Diffusion models can be used to infer cognitive processes involved in fast binary decision tasks. Th...
Most current sequential sampling models have random between-trial variability in their parameters. T...
Diffusion models are widely-used and successful accounts of the time course of two-choice decision m...
Diffusion models are widely-used and successful accounts of the time course of two-choice decision m...
Behavioral data obtained with perceptual decision making experiments are typically analyzed with the...
Diffusion models are widely-used and successful accounts of the time course of two-choice decision m...
Response time and accuracy are fundamental measures of behavioral science, but discerning participan...
We present a computational Bayesian approach for Wiener diffusion models, which are prominent accoun...
The Wiener diffusion model (WDM) for 2-alternative tasks assumes that sensory information is integra...
International audienceDrift-diffusion models or DDMs are becoming a standard in the field of computa...
The diffusion model (Ratcliff, 1978) allows for the statistical separation of different components o...
model as a form of data analysis for speeded binary de-cisions. The diffusion model assumes that bin...
Over the last four decades, sequential accumulation models for choice response times have spread thr...