Journal article

Vision for the blind: visual psychophysics and blinded inference for decision models

PL Smith, SD Lilburn

Psychonomic Bulletin and Review | SPRINGER | Published : 2020

Abstract

Evidence accumulation models like the diffusion model are increasingly used by researchers to identify the contributions of sensory and decisional factors to the speed and accuracy of decision-making. Drift rates, decision criteria, and nondecision times estimated from such models provide meaningful estimates of the quality of evidence in the stimulus, the bias and caution in the decision process, and the duration of nondecision processes. Recently, Dutilh et al. (Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 26, 1051–1069, 2019) carried out a large-scale, blinded validation study of decision models using the random dot motion (RDM) task. They found that the parameters of the diffusion model were generally ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was supported by Australian Research Council Discovery Grant DP180101686. We thank Mario Fific, Guy Hawkins, and Adam Osth for helpful comments on an earlier version of the manuscript. A conference paper describing this work was presented at the Australian Mathematical Psychology Conference, Coogee Beach, New South Wales, Australia in February 2020. Code for the models described in this article can be downloaded from https://github.com/philipls/TimeVarying.