Journal article
Combining error-driven models of associative learning with evidence accumulation models of decision-making
DK Sewell, HK Jach, RJ Boag, CA Van Heer
Psychonomic Bulletin and Review | SPRINGER | Published : 2019
Abstract
As people learn a new skill, performance changes along two fundamental dimensions: Responses become progressively faster and more accurate. In cognitive psychology, these facets of improvement have typically been addressed by separate classes of theories. Reductions in response time (RT) have usually been addressed by theories of skill acquisition, whereas increases in accuracy have been explained by associative learning theories. To date, relatively little work has examined how changes in RT relate to changes in response accuracy, and whether these changes can be accounted for quantitatively within a single theoretical framework. The current work examines joint changes in accuracy and RT in..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
Address correspondence to David K. Sewell at the School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia. Electronic mail may be sent tod.sewell@uq.edu.au. This research was supported by an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DE140100772) to David Sewell.