We make hundreds of decisions every day, many of them extremely quickly and without much explicit deliberation. This motivates two important open questions: What is the minimum time required to make choices with above chance accuracy? What is the impact of additional decision making time on choice accuracy? We investigated these questions in four experiments in which subjects made binary food choices using saccadic or manual responses, under either “speed” or “accuracy” instructions. Subjects were able to make above chance decisions in as little as 313 ms, and choose their preferred food item in over 70% of trials at average speeds of 404 ms. Further, slowing down their responses by either asking them explicitly to be confident about their ...
Speed–accuracy trade-offs strongly influence the rate of reward that can be earned in many decision-...
AbstractIn daily life, unconscious choices guide many of our on-going actions. Such choices need to ...
Everyone is familiar with the speed-accuracy trade-off (SAT). To make good choices, we need to balan...
In daily life, unconscious choices guide many of our on-going actions. Such choices need to be made ...
The ability to trade accuracy for speed is fundamental to human decision making. The speed-accuracy ...
Decision-makers effortlessly balance the need for urgency against the need for caution. Theoretical ...
The ability to trade accuracy for speed is fundamental to human decision making. The speed–accuracy ...
Many simple decisions allow us to trade o between speed and accuracy. When time is critical, decisi...
Perceptual decision making has been successfully modeled as a process of evidence accumulation up to...
The ability to trade accuracy for speed is fundamental to human decision making. The speed–accuracy ...
Perceptual decision making has been successfully modeled as a process of evidence accumulation up to...
The context in which a decision occurs can influence the decision-making process in many ways. In th...
Response time is used here to interpret choice in decision problems. I first establish that there is...
The context in which a decision occurs can influence the decision-making process in many ways. In th...
Decision-makers effortlessly balance the need for urgency against the need for caution. Theoretical ...
Speed–accuracy trade-offs strongly influence the rate of reward that can be earned in many decision-...
AbstractIn daily life, unconscious choices guide many of our on-going actions. Such choices need to ...
Everyone is familiar with the speed-accuracy trade-off (SAT). To make good choices, we need to balan...
In daily life, unconscious choices guide many of our on-going actions. Such choices need to be made ...
The ability to trade accuracy for speed is fundamental to human decision making. The speed-accuracy ...
Decision-makers effortlessly balance the need for urgency against the need for caution. Theoretical ...
The ability to trade accuracy for speed is fundamental to human decision making. The speed–accuracy ...
Many simple decisions allow us to trade o between speed and accuracy. When time is critical, decisi...
Perceptual decision making has been successfully modeled as a process of evidence accumulation up to...
The ability to trade accuracy for speed is fundamental to human decision making. The speed–accuracy ...
Perceptual decision making has been successfully modeled as a process of evidence accumulation up to...
The context in which a decision occurs can influence the decision-making process in many ways. In th...
Response time is used here to interpret choice in decision problems. I first establish that there is...
The context in which a decision occurs can influence the decision-making process in many ways. In th...
Decision-makers effortlessly balance the need for urgency against the need for caution. Theoretical ...
Speed–accuracy trade-offs strongly influence the rate of reward that can be earned in many decision-...
AbstractIn daily life, unconscious choices guide many of our on-going actions. Such choices need to ...
Everyone is familiar with the speed-accuracy trade-off (SAT). To make good choices, we need to balan...