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Trial-history biases in evidence accumulation can give rise to apparent lapses in decision-making

Psychology

Trial-history biases in evidence accumulation can give rise to apparent lapses in decision-making

D. Gupta, B. Depasquale, et al.

Apparent lapses and trial-history biases in perceptual decisions can both emerge from a single optimal process under mistaken beliefs that the world is changing. The authors show an accumulation-to-bound model with history-dependent initial states predicts both effects and matches behavioral data from male rats, including a novel reaction-time task. Research conducted by Diksha Gupta, Brian DePasquale, Charles D. Kopec, and Carlos D. Brody.... show more
Abstract
Trial history biases and lapses are two of the most common suboptimalities observed during perceptual decision-making. These suboptimalities are routinely assumed to arise from distinct processes. However, previous work has suggested that they covary in their prevalence and that their proposed neural substrates overlap. Here we demonstrate that during decision-making, history biases and apparent lapses can both arise from a common cognitive process that is optimal under mistaken beliefs that the world is changing i.e. nonstationary. This corresponds to an accumulation-to-bound model with history-dependent updates to the initial state of the accumulator. We test our model's predictions about the relative prevalence of history biases and lapses, and show that they are robustly borne out in two distinct decision-making datasets of male rats, including data from a novel reaction time task. Our model improves the ability to precisely predict decision-making dynamics within and across trials, by positing a process through which agents can generate quasi-stochastic choices.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jan 22, 2024
Authors
Diksha Gupta, Brian DePasquale, Charles D. Kopec, Carlos D. Brody
Tags
trial-history biases
lapses
perceptual decision-making
nonstationary beliefs
accumulation-to-bound model
history-dependent initial state
rodent reaction-time behavior
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