Abstract

Humans often make decisions based on uncertain sensory information. Signal detection theory (SDT) describes detection and discrimination decisions as a comparison of stimulus “strength” to a fixed decision criterion. However, recent research suggests that current responses depend on the recent history of stimuli and previous responses, suggesting that the decision criterion is updated trial-by-trial. The mechanisms underpinning criterion setting remain unknown. Here, we examine how observers learn to set a decision criterion in an orientation-discrimination task under both static and dynamic conditions. To investigate mechanisms underlying trial-by-trial criterion placement, we introduce a novel task in which participants explicitly set the criterion, and compare it to a more traditional discrimination task, allowing us to model this explicit indication of criterion dynamics. In each task, stimuli were ellipses with principal orientations drawn from two categories: Gaussian distributions with different means and equal variance. In the covert-criterion task, observers categorized a displayed ellipse. In the overt-criterion task, observers adjusted the orientation of a line that served as the discrimination criterion for a subsequently presented ellipse. We compared performance to the ideal Bayesian learner and several suboptimal models that varied in both computational and memory demands. Under static and dynamic conditions, we found that, in both tasks, observers used suboptimal learning rules. In most conditions, a model in which the recent history of past samples determines a belief about category means fit the data best for most observers and on average. Our results reveal dynamic adjustment of discrimination criterion, even after prolonged training, and indicate how decision criteria are updated over time.

Highlights

  • Understanding how humans make decisions based on uncertain sensory information is crucial to understanding how humans interpret and act on the world

  • Suboptimal Criterion Learning makes little sense. We investigate this as a problem of learning: How is the decision criterion set when various aspects of the context are unknown? We examine criterion learning in both static and dynamic environments

  • In addition to a more traditional discrimination task in which the criterion is a theoretical construct and unobservable, we use a novel task in which participants must explicitly set the criterion before being shown the stimulus

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding how humans make decisions based on uncertain sensory information is crucial to understanding how humans interpret and act on the world. For over 60 years, signal detection theory has been used to analyze detection and discrimination tasks [1]. Sensory data are assumed to be Gaussian with equal variances but different means for signal-absent and signal-present trials. The observer compares the noisy sensory data to a fixed decision criterion. Performance is summarized by d0 (discriminability) and c (decision criterion) based on measured hit and false-alarm rates. Standard analysis assumes stable performance (all parameters fixed) and observer knowledge of the means, variance, prior probabilities and payoff matrix [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]

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