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Neurocomputational mechanisms of confidence in self and others

Psychology

Neurocomputational mechanisms of confidence in self and others

D. Bang, R. Moran, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Dan Bang, Rani Moran, Nathaniel D. Daw, and Stephen M. Fleming explores how we perceive confidence in ourselves and others. By utilizing fMRI while participants placed bets on perceptual decisions, the study reveals the intricate brain interactions behind social confidence estimations.... show more
Abstract
Computing confidence in one's own and others' decisions is critical for social success. While there has been substantial progress in our understanding of confidence estimates about oneself, little is known about how people form confidence estimates about others. Here, we address this question by asking participants undergoing fMRI to place bets on perceptual decisions made by themselves or one of three other players of varying ability. We show that participants compute confidence in another player's decisions by combining distinct estimates of player ability and decision difficulty—allowing them to predict that a good player may get a difficult decision wrong and that a bad player may get an easy decision right. We find that this computation is associated with an interaction between brain systems implicated in decision-making (LIP) and theory of mind (TPJ and dmPFC). These results reveal an interplay between self- and other-related processes during a social confidence computation.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jul 22, 2022
Authors
Dan Bang, Rani Moran, Nathaniel D. Daw, Stephen M. Fleming
Tags
confidence
decision-making
fMRI
social cognition
theory of mind
brain systems
perceptual decisions
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