Journal article

Diffusion Decision Model: Current Issues and History

R Ratcliff, PL Smith, SD Brown, G McKoon

Trends in Cognitive Sciences | ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON | Published : 2016

Abstract

There is growing interest in diffusion models to represent the cognitive and neural processes of speeded decision making. Sequential-sampling models like the diffusion model have a long history in psychology. They view decision making as a process of noisy accumulation of evidence from a stimulus. The standard model assumes that evidence accumulates at a constant rate during the second or two it takes to make a decision. This process can be linked to the behaviors of populations of neurons and to theories of optimality. Diffusion models have been used successfully in a range of cognitive tasks and as psychometric tools in clinical research to examine individual differences. In this review, w..

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University of Melbourne Researchers