Human decisions are rarely made in isolation. We typically have to make a sequence of decisions to reach a goal. Studies in economics and cognitive psychology have shown that making a decision may result in several biases in subsequent judgments. Similar biases have also recently been found in human percepts of low-level stimuli such as motion direction. What lacking is a principled framework that can account for several sequential dependencies between judgments. Towards that goal, in my thesis, I propose and experimentally test a self-consistent Bayesian observer model that assumes humans maintain self-consistency along the inference process. In Chapter 2, I first demonstrate that after having made a categorical decision on stimulus orient...
Humans can meaningfully express their confidence about uncertain events. Normatively, these beliefs ...
A common explanation for biases in judgment and choice has been to postulate two separate processes ...
When people make decisions about sequentially presented items in psychophysical experiments, their d...
Human decisions are rarely made in isolation. We typically have to make a sequence of decisions to r...
Human decisions are rarely made in isolation. We typically have to make a sequence of decisions to r...
Human decisions are rarely made in isolation. We typically have to make a sequence of decisions to r...
Whether driving a car, making critical medical decisions in the ER, answering questions in a marketi...
Normative models of human cognition often appeal to Bayesian filtering, which provides optimal onlin...
Human subjects exhibit “sequential effects ” in many psychological experiments, in which they respon...
Normative models of decision-making that optimally transform noisy (sensory) information into catego...
Bias in perceptual decisions can be generally defined as an effect which is controlled by factors ot...
People are faced with hundreds of decisions every day, of which many involve choices between multi-a...
In this work, we consider a binary hypothesis testing problem involving a group of human decision-ma...
<div><p>Normative models of human cognition often appeal to Bayesian filtering, which provides optim...
A single coherent framework is proposed to synthesize long-standing research on 8 seemingly unrelate...
Humans can meaningfully express their confidence about uncertain events. Normatively, these beliefs ...
A common explanation for biases in judgment and choice has been to postulate two separate processes ...
When people make decisions about sequentially presented items in psychophysical experiments, their d...
Human decisions are rarely made in isolation. We typically have to make a sequence of decisions to r...
Human decisions are rarely made in isolation. We typically have to make a sequence of decisions to r...
Human decisions are rarely made in isolation. We typically have to make a sequence of decisions to r...
Whether driving a car, making critical medical decisions in the ER, answering questions in a marketi...
Normative models of human cognition often appeal to Bayesian filtering, which provides optimal onlin...
Human subjects exhibit “sequential effects ” in many psychological experiments, in which they respon...
Normative models of decision-making that optimally transform noisy (sensory) information into catego...
Bias in perceptual decisions can be generally defined as an effect which is controlled by factors ot...
People are faced with hundreds of decisions every day, of which many involve choices between multi-a...
In this work, we consider a binary hypothesis testing problem involving a group of human decision-ma...
<div><p>Normative models of human cognition often appeal to Bayesian filtering, which provides optim...
A single coherent framework is proposed to synthesize long-standing research on 8 seemingly unrelate...
Humans can meaningfully express their confidence about uncertain events. Normatively, these beliefs ...
A common explanation for biases in judgment and choice has been to postulate two separate processes ...
When people make decisions about sequentially presented items in psychophysical experiments, their d...