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Characterization of decision commitment rule alterations during an auditory change detection task.

Bridgette Johnson1,2, Rebeka Verma1,2,3, Manying Sun1,2

  • 1Center for Neuroscience, University of California, Davis, California.

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|August 11, 2017
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Summary

Flexible decision stopping rules control choices without altering information weighting. Post-error strategy adjustments reduce repeated mistakes, enhancing decision-making flexibility.

Keywords:
adaptive behaviorchange detectiondecision commitmentdecision makingexecutive control

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Decision science

Background:

  • Decision commitment relies on flexible stopping rules to balance speed and accuracy.
  • Altering stopping rules is key to controlling decision-making processes.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how individuals control decision balance using different stopping rules.
  • To examine the impact of stopping rules on temporal information weighting and post-error adjustments.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized a novel auditory change detection paradigm.
  • Estimated temporal weighting of sensory information.
  • Analyzed post-error strategy alterations.

Main Results:

  • Different stopping rules did not systematically alter the temporal weighting of sensory information.
  • Bidirectional post-error strategy alterations were observed, dependent on error type.
  • These adjustments effectively reduced the likelihood of consecutive errors of the same type.

Conclusions:

  • Change detection tasks offer a promising paradigm for studying neural mechanisms of flexible decision control.
  • Findings generalize post-error slowing observations to change detection tasks.
  • Understanding stopping rule control is crucial for behavioral flexibility.