Journal article

Pupil dilation betrays the timing of decisions

W Einhäuser, C Koch, OL Carter

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | Published : 2010

Abstract

The notion of "mind-reading" by carefully observing another individual's physiological responses has recently become commonplace in popular culture, particularly in the context of brain imaging. The question remains, however, whether outwardly accessible physiological signals indeed betray a decision before a person voluntarily reports it. In one experiment we asked observers to push a button at any time during a 10-s period ("immediate overt response"). In a series of three additional experiments observers were asked to select one number from five sequentially presented digits but concealed their decision until the trial's end ("covert choice"). In these experiments observers either had to ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers