SummaryNeural systems adapt to background levels of stimulation. Adaptive gain control has been extensively studied in sensory systems but overlooked in decision-theoretic models. Here, we describe evidence for adaptive gain control during the serial integration of decision-relevant information. Human observers judged the average information provided by a rapid stream of visual events (samples). The impact that each sample wielded over choices depended on its consistency with the previous sample, with more consistent or expected samples wielding the greatest influence over choice. This bias was also visible in the encoding of decision information in pupillometric signals and in cortical responses measured with functional neuroimaging. These...
Fluctuations in perceptual decisions emerge when our brain confronts with ambiguous sensory stimuli...
The neural dynamics underpinning binary perceptual decisions and their transformation into actions a...
Every instant of perception depends on a cascade of brain processes calibrated to the history of sen...
SummaryNeural systems adapt to background levels of stimulation. Adaptive gain control has been exte...
International audienceNeural systems adapt to background levels of stimulation. Adaptive gain contro...
Highlights •Humans show biased integration of decision-relevant evidence •Later and more expected ...
Recently, there has been an increased interest on the neural mechanisms underlying perceptual decisi...
Recently, there has been an increased interest on the neural mechanisms underlying perceptual decisi...
Single-unit animal studies have consistently reported decision-related activity mirroring a process ...
Learning from successes and failures often improves the quality of subsequent decisions. Past outcom...
SummaryMaking successful decisions under uncertainty due to noisy sensory signals is thought to bene...
Decision bias is traditionally conceptualized as an internal reference against which sensory evidenc...
In everyday life, humans often encounter complex environments in which multiple sources of informati...
Sensory signals are highly structured in both space and time. These regularities allow expectations ...
In everyday life, humans often encounter complex environments in which multiple sources of informati...
Fluctuations in perceptual decisions emerge when our brain confronts with ambiguous sensory stimuli...
The neural dynamics underpinning binary perceptual decisions and their transformation into actions a...
Every instant of perception depends on a cascade of brain processes calibrated to the history of sen...
SummaryNeural systems adapt to background levels of stimulation. Adaptive gain control has been exte...
International audienceNeural systems adapt to background levels of stimulation. Adaptive gain contro...
Highlights •Humans show biased integration of decision-relevant evidence •Later and more expected ...
Recently, there has been an increased interest on the neural mechanisms underlying perceptual decisi...
Recently, there has been an increased interest on the neural mechanisms underlying perceptual decisi...
Single-unit animal studies have consistently reported decision-related activity mirroring a process ...
Learning from successes and failures often improves the quality of subsequent decisions. Past outcom...
SummaryMaking successful decisions under uncertainty due to noisy sensory signals is thought to bene...
Decision bias is traditionally conceptualized as an internal reference against which sensory evidenc...
In everyday life, humans often encounter complex environments in which multiple sources of informati...
Sensory signals are highly structured in both space and time. These regularities allow expectations ...
In everyday life, humans often encounter complex environments in which multiple sources of informati...
Fluctuations in perceptual decisions emerge when our brain confronts with ambiguous sensory stimuli...
The neural dynamics underpinning binary perceptual decisions and their transformation into actions a...
Every instant of perception depends on a cascade of brain processes calibrated to the history of sen...