© 2015 Elsevier Ltd. Metacognition, the ability to think about our own thoughts, is a fundamental component of our mental life and is involved in memory, learning, planning and decision-making. Here we focus on one aspect of metacognition, namely confidence in perceptual decisions. We review the literature in psychophysics, neuropsychology and neuroscience. Although still a very new field, several recent studies suggest there are specific brain circuits devoted to monitoring and reporting confidence, whereas others suggest that confidence information is encoded within decision-making circuits. We provide suggestions, based on interdisciplinary research, to disentangle these disparate results.Link_to_subscribed_fulltex
Basic psychophysics tells us that decisions are rarely perfect: even with identical stimuli choice a...
Decision confidence is a person's strength of belief about the optimization or correctness of a pred...
Emotion and cognition are known to interact during human decision processes. In this study we focus ...
Humans effortlessly and accurately judge their subjective probability of being correct in a given de...
The human capacity to compute the likelihood that a decision is correct-known as metacognition-has p...
In order to successfully adjust to changes and learn in the sensory environment, humans must be able...
Empirical evidence indicates that people can provide accurate evaluations of their own thoughts and ...
Decisions are usually accompanied by a feeling of being wrong or right – a subjective confidence est...
Throughout the history of psychology, a lively debate has surrounded people’s ability—known as metac...
International audienceDecisions are usually accompanied by a feeling of being wrong or right-a subje...
How confident are you? As humans, aware of our subjective sense of confidence, we can readily answer...
Choice confidence represents the degree of belief that one's actions are likely to be correct or rew...
One important aspect of metacognition is the ability to accurately evaluate one’s performance. Peopl...
Abstract Confidence is typically defined as a subjective judgment about whether a decision is right...
Perceptual decision-making employs a range of higher order metacognitive processes. Two of the most ...
Basic psychophysics tells us that decisions are rarely perfect: even with identical stimuli choice a...
Decision confidence is a person's strength of belief about the optimization or correctness of a pred...
Emotion and cognition are known to interact during human decision processes. In this study we focus ...
Humans effortlessly and accurately judge their subjective probability of being correct in a given de...
The human capacity to compute the likelihood that a decision is correct-known as metacognition-has p...
In order to successfully adjust to changes and learn in the sensory environment, humans must be able...
Empirical evidence indicates that people can provide accurate evaluations of their own thoughts and ...
Decisions are usually accompanied by a feeling of being wrong or right – a subjective confidence est...
Throughout the history of psychology, a lively debate has surrounded people’s ability—known as metac...
International audienceDecisions are usually accompanied by a feeling of being wrong or right-a subje...
How confident are you? As humans, aware of our subjective sense of confidence, we can readily answer...
Choice confidence represents the degree of belief that one's actions are likely to be correct or rew...
One important aspect of metacognition is the ability to accurately evaluate one’s performance. Peopl...
Abstract Confidence is typically defined as a subjective judgment about whether a decision is right...
Perceptual decision-making employs a range of higher order metacognitive processes. Two of the most ...
Basic psychophysics tells us that decisions are rarely perfect: even with identical stimuli choice a...
Decision confidence is a person's strength of belief about the optimization or correctness of a pred...
Emotion and cognition are known to interact during human decision processes. In this study we focus ...