Despite the complexity and variability of decision processes, motor responses are generally stereotypical and independent of decision difficulty. How is this consistency achieved? Through an engineering analogy we consider how and why a system should be designed to realise not only flexible decision-making, but also consistent decision implementation. We specifically consider neurobiologically-plausible accumulator models of decision-making, in which decisions are made when a decision threshold is reached. To trade-off between the speed and accuracy of the decision in these models, one can either adjust the thresholds themselves or, equivalently, fix the thresholds and adjust baseline activation. Here we review how this equivalence can be i...
A key goal in the study of decision making is determining how neural networks involved in perception...
Both decisionmaking and sensorimotor control require real-time processing of noisy information strea...
This article reviews recently proposed theories postulating that, during simple choices, the brain p...
Despite the complexity and variability of decision processes, motor responses are generally stereoty...
Despite the complexity and variability of decision processes, motor responses are generally stereoty...
<div><p>Speed-accuracy tradeoff (SAT) is an adaptive process balancing urgency and caution when maki...
Everyone is familiar with the speed-accuracy trade-off (SAT). To make good choices, we need to balan...
Speed-accuracy tradeoff (SAT) is an adaptive process balancing urgency and caution when making decis...
International audienceEvolutionary pressures suggest that choices should be optimized to maximize re...
This article introduces an integrated and biologically-inspired theory of decision-making, motor pre...
International audienceA growing body of evidence suggests that decision-making and action execution ...
Most psychological models of perceptual decision making are of the accumulation-to-threshold variety...
Human modern life entails the need to make many abstract, deliberative decisions such as selecting a...
Both decision making and sensorimotor control require real-time processing of noisy information stre...
Contains fulltext : 102420.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Both decision m...
A key goal in the study of decision making is determining how neural networks involved in perception...
Both decisionmaking and sensorimotor control require real-time processing of noisy information strea...
This article reviews recently proposed theories postulating that, during simple choices, the brain p...
Despite the complexity and variability of decision processes, motor responses are generally stereoty...
Despite the complexity and variability of decision processes, motor responses are generally stereoty...
<div><p>Speed-accuracy tradeoff (SAT) is an adaptive process balancing urgency and caution when maki...
Everyone is familiar with the speed-accuracy trade-off (SAT). To make good choices, we need to balan...
Speed-accuracy tradeoff (SAT) is an adaptive process balancing urgency and caution when making decis...
International audienceEvolutionary pressures suggest that choices should be optimized to maximize re...
This article introduces an integrated and biologically-inspired theory of decision-making, motor pre...
International audienceA growing body of evidence suggests that decision-making and action execution ...
Most psychological models of perceptual decision making are of the accumulation-to-threshold variety...
Human modern life entails the need to make many abstract, deliberative decisions such as selecting a...
Both decision making and sensorimotor control require real-time processing of noisy information stre...
Contains fulltext : 102420.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Both decision m...
A key goal in the study of decision making is determining how neural networks involved in perception...
Both decisionmaking and sensorimotor control require real-time processing of noisy information strea...
This article reviews recently proposed theories postulating that, during simple choices, the brain p...