A stochastic visual motion discrimination task is widely used to study rapid decision-making in humans and animals. Among trials of the same sensory difficulty within a block of fixed decision strategy, humans and monkeys are widely reported to make more errors in the individual trials with longer reaction times. This finding has posed a challenge for the drift-diffusion model of sensory decision-making, which in its basic form predicts that errors and correct responses should have the same reaction time distributions. We previously reported that rats also violate this model prediction, but in the opposite direction: for rats, motion discrimination accuracy was highest in the trials with the longest reaction times. To rule out task differen...
SummaryWhile it is commonly assumed that decisions taken slowly result in superior outcomes, is it p...
Animal behavior provides context for understanding disease models and physiology. However, that beha...
SummaryAlthough rodents are the first-choice animal model in the life sciences, they are rarely used...
A stochastic visual motion discrimination task is widely used to study rapid decision-making in huma...
Animals must continuously evaluate sensory information to select the preferable among possible actio...
Animals must continuously evaluate sensory information to select the preferable among possible actio...
The trade-off between speed and accuracy of sensory discrimination has most often been studied using...
We do not fully understand the resolution at which temporal information is processed by different sp...
A recent study by van Ede et al. (2012) shows that the accuracy and reaction time in humans of tacti...
International audienceSpeed-accuracy trade-off adjustments in decision-making have been mainly studi...
Why do humans make errors on seemingly trivial perceptual decisions? It has been shown that such err...
<div><p>Why do humans make errors on seemingly trivial perceptual decisions? It has been shown that ...
While it is commonly assumed that decisions taken slowly result in superior outcomes, is it possible...
Decision making often involves the accumulation of information over time, but acquiring information ...
AbstractThe coherence thresholds to discriminate the direction of motion in random-dot kinematograms...
SummaryWhile it is commonly assumed that decisions taken slowly result in superior outcomes, is it p...
Animal behavior provides context for understanding disease models and physiology. However, that beha...
SummaryAlthough rodents are the first-choice animal model in the life sciences, they are rarely used...
A stochastic visual motion discrimination task is widely used to study rapid decision-making in huma...
Animals must continuously evaluate sensory information to select the preferable among possible actio...
Animals must continuously evaluate sensory information to select the preferable among possible actio...
The trade-off between speed and accuracy of sensory discrimination has most often been studied using...
We do not fully understand the resolution at which temporal information is processed by different sp...
A recent study by van Ede et al. (2012) shows that the accuracy and reaction time in humans of tacti...
International audienceSpeed-accuracy trade-off adjustments in decision-making have been mainly studi...
Why do humans make errors on seemingly trivial perceptual decisions? It has been shown that such err...
<div><p>Why do humans make errors on seemingly trivial perceptual decisions? It has been shown that ...
While it is commonly assumed that decisions taken slowly result in superior outcomes, is it possible...
Decision making often involves the accumulation of information over time, but acquiring information ...
AbstractThe coherence thresholds to discriminate the direction of motion in random-dot kinematograms...
SummaryWhile it is commonly assumed that decisions taken slowly result in superior outcomes, is it p...
Animal behavior provides context for understanding disease models and physiology. However, that beha...
SummaryAlthough rodents are the first-choice animal model in the life sciences, they are rarely used...