The ability to correctly estimate the probability of one’s choices being correct is fundamental to optimally re-evaluate previous choices or to arbitrate between different decision strategies. Experimental evidence nonetheless suggests that this metacognitive process—confidence judgment- is susceptible to numerous biases. Here, we investigate the effect of outcome valence (gains or losses) on confidence while participants learned stimulus-outcome associations by trial-and-error. In two experiments, participants were more confident in their choices when learning to seek gains compared to avoiding losses, despite equal difficulty and performance between those two contexts. Computational modelling revealed that this bias is driven by the conte...
International audienceHumans do not integrate new information objectively: outcomes carrying a posit...
Substantial evidence indicates that subjective value is adapted to the statistics of reward expected...
International audienceThe valence of new information influences learning rates in humans: good news ...
The ability to correctly estimate the probability of one's choices being correct is fundamental to o...
The ability to correctly estimate the probability of one's choices being correct is fundamental to o...
Experiment 3 task schematic, reversal learning and confidence results. (A) Task design and contingen...
Incentive mechanism and overconfidence (A) Incentive mechanism. In Experiment 2, for the payout-rele...
Experiment 1 Task Schematic, Learning and Confidence Results (A) Behavioral task. Successive screens...
Experiment 2 Task Schematic, Learning and Confidence Results (A) Behavioral task. Successive screens...
International audienceA wealth of evidence in perceptual and economic decision-making research sugge...
© 2020, eLife Sciences Publications Ltd. All rights reserved. Learning from successes and failures o...
In simple instrumental-learning tasks, humans learn to seek gains and to avoid losses equally well. ...
Learning from successes and failures often improves the quality of subsequent decisions. Past outcom...
Our brain processes noisy and incomplete information to make adaptive decisions and chooses appropri...
International audienceLearning how certain cues in our environment predict specific states of nature...
International audienceHumans do not integrate new information objectively: outcomes carrying a posit...
Substantial evidence indicates that subjective value is adapted to the statistics of reward expected...
International audienceThe valence of new information influences learning rates in humans: good news ...
The ability to correctly estimate the probability of one's choices being correct is fundamental to o...
The ability to correctly estimate the probability of one's choices being correct is fundamental to o...
Experiment 3 task schematic, reversal learning and confidence results. (A) Task design and contingen...
Incentive mechanism and overconfidence (A) Incentive mechanism. In Experiment 2, for the payout-rele...
Experiment 1 Task Schematic, Learning and Confidence Results (A) Behavioral task. Successive screens...
Experiment 2 Task Schematic, Learning and Confidence Results (A) Behavioral task. Successive screens...
International audienceA wealth of evidence in perceptual and economic decision-making research sugge...
© 2020, eLife Sciences Publications Ltd. All rights reserved. Learning from successes and failures o...
In simple instrumental-learning tasks, humans learn to seek gains and to avoid losses equally well. ...
Learning from successes and failures often improves the quality of subsequent decisions. Past outcom...
Our brain processes noisy and incomplete information to make adaptive decisions and chooses appropri...
International audienceLearning how certain cues in our environment predict specific states of nature...
International audienceHumans do not integrate new information objectively: outcomes carrying a posit...
Substantial evidence indicates that subjective value is adapted to the statistics of reward expected...
International audienceThe valence of new information influences learning rates in humans: good news ...