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Neural mechanisms of metacognitive improvement under speed pressure
PsychologyCommunications Biology

Neural mechanisms of metacognitive improvement under speed pressure

C. Stone, J. B. Mattingley, et al.

Under tight deadlines people became faster and less accurate, yet showed improved metacognition. Time-resolved EEG during a motion-discrimination task revealed larger centro-parietal positivity (CPP) and a stronger relationship between post-decisional CPP and metacognitive ratings for errors under short deadlines. This research was conducted by the authors present in the <Authors> tag.... show more
Abstract
The ability to accurately monitor the quality of one's choices, or metacognition, improves under speed pressure, possibly due to changes in post-decisional evidence processing. Here, we investigate the neural processes that regulate decision-making and metacognition under speed pressure using time-resolved analyses of brain activity recorded using electroencephalography. Participants performed a motion discrimination task under short and long response deadlines and provided a metacognitive rating following each response. Behaviourally, participants were faster, less accurate, and showed superior metacognition with short deadlines. These effects were accompanied by a larger centro-parietal positivity (CPP), a neural correlate of evidence accumulation. Crucially, post-decisional CPP amplitude was more strongly associated with participants' metacognitive ratings following errors under short relative to long response deadlines. Our results suggest that superior metacognition under speed pressure may stem from enhanced metacognitive readout of post-decisional evidence.
Publisher
Communications Biology
Published On
Feb 12, 2025
Authors
Caleb Stone, Jason B. Mattingley, Dragan Rangelov
Tags
metacognitionspeed pressurepost-decisional evidencecentro-parietal positivity (CPP)electroencephalography (EEG)motion discriminationresponse deadlines
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