Abstract

The Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) is considered a gold standard for the assessment of cognitive flexibility. On the WCST, repeating a sorting category following negative feedback is typically treated as indicating reduced cognitive flexibility. Therefore such responses are referred to as ‘perseveration’ errors. Recent research suggests that the propensity for perseveration errors is modulated by response demands: They occur less frequently when their commitment repeats the previously executed response. Here, we propose parallel reinforcement-learning models of card sorting performance, which assume that card sorting performance can be conceptualized as resulting from model-free reinforcement learning at the level of responses that occurs in parallel with model-based reinforcement learning at the categorical level. We compared parallel reinforcement-learning models with purely model-based reinforcement learning, and with the state-of-the-art attentional-updating model. We analyzed data from 375 participants who completed a computerized WCST. Parallel reinforcement-learning models showed best predictive accuracies for the majority of participants. Only parallel reinforcement-learning models accounted for the modulation of perseveration propensity by response demands. In conclusion, parallel reinforcement-learning models provide a new theoretical perspective on card sorting and it offers a suitable framework for discerning individual differences in latent processes that subserve behavioral flexibility.

Highlights

  • The Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) is considered a gold standard for the assessment of cognitive flexibility

  • Conditional error probabilities were entered into a Bayesian repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) with the factors error type and response demand

  • This finding replicates the M-WCST-based finding of a modulation of perseveration propensity by response d­ emands[50]

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Summary

Introduction

The Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) is considered a gold standard for the assessment of cognitive flexibility. On the WCST, repeating a sorting category following negative feedback is typically treated as indicating reduced cognitive flexibility Such responses are referred to as ‘perseveration’ errors. Cognitive flexibility is of importance in studies of individual d­ ifferences[9,10,11,12,13] Card sorting tasks, such as the numerous variants of the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST)[14,15,16,17], represent the gold standard for the neuropsychological assessment of cognitive f­lexibility[1]. Manifold cognitive processes were proposed to contribute to card sorting performance, such as feedbackdriven learning, category formation, set maintenance, category inference, working memory, and cognitive ­inhibition[1,12,31,32,33,34]. With the number of putative cognitive processes, and the complexity of card sorting tasks, such as the WCST, in mind, it remains difficult to infer—based on traditional methods—those cognitive processes that are truly related to card sorting performance, and how they might contribute to variability in individual card sorting ­performance[31]

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