Humans strategically shift decision bias by flexibly adjusting sensory evidence accumulation

Open Access
Authors
  • N.A. Kloosterman
  • J.W. de Gee ORCID logo
  • M. Werkle-Bergner
  • U. Lindenberger
Publication date 06-02-2019
Journal eLife
Article number e37321
Volume | Issue number 8
Number of pages 27
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG)
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract

Decision bias is traditionally conceptualized as an internal reference against which sensory evidence is compared. Instead, we show that individuals implement decision bias by shifting the rate of sensory evidence accumulation toward a decision bound. Participants performed a target detection task while we recorded EEG. We experimentally manipulated participants’ decision criterion for reporting targets using different stimulus-response reward contingencies, inducing either a liberal or a conservative bias. Drift diffusion modeling revealed that a liberal strategy biased sensory evidence accumulation toward target-present choices. Moreover, a liberal bias resulted in stronger midfrontal pre-stimulus 2—6 Hz (theta) power and suppression of pre-stimulus 8—12 Hz (alpha) power in posterior cortex. Alpha suppression in turn was linked to the output activity in visual cortex, as expressed through 59—100 Hz (gamma) power. These findings show that observers can intentionally control cortical excitability to strategically bias evidence accumulation toward the decision bound that maximizes reward.

Document type Article
Language English
Related dataset Data from: Humans strategically shift decision bias by flexibly adjusting sensory evidence accumulation in visual cortex
Published at https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.37321
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85061114620
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elife-37321-v1 (Final published version)
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