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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Awarded by National Institute on Aging
Funding Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Jerome Busemeyer, Josh Gold, and Tim Hanks for comments on the paper. Preparation of this article was supported by National Institute on Aging grant R01-AG041176, Department of Education/Institute of Educational Sciences grant R305A120189, and Australian Research Council grants DP140102970 and FT120100244.