Speed-accuracy tradeoff (SAT) is an adaptive process balancing urgency and caution when making decisions. Computational cognitive theories, known as "evidence accumulation models", have explained SATs via a manipulation of the amount of evidence necessary to trigger response selection. New light has been shed on these processes by single-cell recordings from monkeys who were adjusting their SAT settings. Those data have been interpreted as inconsistent with existing evidence accumulation theories, prompting the addition of new mechanisms to the models. We show that this interpretation was wrong, by demonstrating that the neural spiking data, and the behavioural data are consistent with existing evidence accumulation theories, without positi...
Humans and other animals must often make decisions on the basis of imperfect evidence. Statisticians...
As we interact with the world, we must decide what to do next based on previously acquired and incom...
People are able to trade off speed and accuracy when performing a task; that is, they can either foc...
Speed-accuracy tradeoff (SAT) is an adaptive process balancing urgency and caution when making decis...
Everyone is familiar with the speed-accuracy trade-off (SAT). To make good choices, we need to balan...
International audienceEvolutionary pressures suggest that choices should be optimized to maximize re...
The speed and accuracy of decision-making have a well-known trading relationship: hasty decisions ar...
Recent research has accumulated insights into the neural processes underlying perceptual decision ma...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2014Difficult decisions often require evaluation of sample...
A decision is a commitment to a proposition or plan of action based on information and values associ...
AbstractPrimate studies show slow ramping activity in posterior parietal cortex (PPC) neurons during...
Humans and other animals must often make decisions on the basis of imperfect evidence. Statisticians...
Perceptual decision making in monkeys relies on decision neurons, which accumulate evidence and main...
Simple perceptual tasks have laid the groundwork for understanding the neurobiology of decision-maki...
Most psychological models of perceptual decision making are of the accumulation-to-threshold variety...
Humans and other animals must often make decisions on the basis of imperfect evidence. Statisticians...
As we interact with the world, we must decide what to do next based on previously acquired and incom...
People are able to trade off speed and accuracy when performing a task; that is, they can either foc...
Speed-accuracy tradeoff (SAT) is an adaptive process balancing urgency and caution when making decis...
Everyone is familiar with the speed-accuracy trade-off (SAT). To make good choices, we need to balan...
International audienceEvolutionary pressures suggest that choices should be optimized to maximize re...
The speed and accuracy of decision-making have a well-known trading relationship: hasty decisions ar...
Recent research has accumulated insights into the neural processes underlying perceptual decision ma...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2014Difficult decisions often require evaluation of sample...
A decision is a commitment to a proposition or plan of action based on information and values associ...
AbstractPrimate studies show slow ramping activity in posterior parietal cortex (PPC) neurons during...
Humans and other animals must often make decisions on the basis of imperfect evidence. Statisticians...
Perceptual decision making in monkeys relies on decision neurons, which accumulate evidence and main...
Simple perceptual tasks have laid the groundwork for understanding the neurobiology of decision-maki...
Most psychological models of perceptual decision making are of the accumulation-to-threshold variety...
Humans and other animals must often make decisions on the basis of imperfect evidence. Statisticians...
As we interact with the world, we must decide what to do next based on previously acquired and incom...
People are able to trade off speed and accuracy when performing a task; that is, they can either foc...