Assessing evidence accumulation and rule learning in humans with an online game

被引:0
|
作者
Do, Quan
Li, Yutong
Kane, Gary A.
McGuire, Joseph T.
Scott, Benjamin B. [1 ]
机构
[1] Boston Univ, Dept Psychol & Brain Sci, Boston, MA 02215 USA
关键词
accumulation; bias; feedback; gamification; noise; DECISION-MAKING; BEHAVIOR; MODEL; REPRESENTATION; PERCEPTION; NUMBER; TIME;
D O I
10.1152/jn.00124.2022
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Evidence accumulation, an essential component of perception and decision making, is frequently studied with psychophysical tasks involving noisy or ambiguous stimuli. In these tasks, participants typically receive verbal or written instructions that describe the strategy that should be used to guide decisions. Although convenient and effective, explicit instructions can influence learning and decision making strategies and can limit comparisons with animal models, in which behaviors are reinforced through feedback. Here, we developed an online video game and nonverbal training pipeline, inspired by pulse-based tasks for rodents, as an alternative to traditional psychophysical tasks used to study evidence accumulation. Using this game, we collected behavioral data from hundreds of participants trained with an explicit description of the decision rule or with experiential feedback. Participants trained with feedback alone learned the game rules rapidly and used strategies and displayed biases similar to those who received explicit instructions. Finally, by leveraging data across hundreds of participants, we show that perceptual judgments were well described by an accumulation process in which noise scaled nonlinearly with evidence, consistent with previous animal studies but inconsistent with diffusion models widely used to describe perceptual decisions in humans. These results challenge the conventional description of the accumulation process and suggest that online games provide a valuable platform to examine perceptual decision making and learning in humans. In addition, the feedback-based training pipeline developed for this game may be useful for evaluating perceptual decision making in human populations with difficulty following verbal instructions. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Perceptual uncertainty sets critical constraints on our ability to accumulate evidence and make decisions; however, its sources remain unclear. We developed a video game, and feedback-based training pipeline, to study uncertainty during decision making. Leveraging choices from hundreds of subjects, we demonstrate that human choices are inconsistent with popular diffusion models of human decision making and instead are best fit by models in which perceptual uncertainty scales nonlinearly with the strength of sensory evidence.
引用
收藏
页码:131 / 143
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Rule Designs for Optimal Online Game Matchmaking
    Xu, Mingkuan
    Yu, Yang
    Wu, Chenye
    2021 PROCEEDINGS OF THE 40TH CHINESE CONTROL CONFERENCE (CCC), 2021, : 1055 - 1062
  • [2] ASSESSING ONLINE LEARNING
    Silva, F.
    EDULEARN14: 6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EDUCATION AND NEW LEARNING TECHNOLOGIES, 2014, : 2432 - 2440
  • [3] Assessing Online Learning
    Austin, Gwladys
    COMMUNITY COLLEGE JOURNAL OF RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, 2007, 31 (01) : 79 - 81
  • [4] Assessing the accessibility of online learning
    Badge, Joanne L.
    Dawson, Emma
    Cann, Alan J.
    Scott, Jon
    INNOVATIONS IN EDUCATION AND TEACHING INTERNATIONAL, 2008, 45 (02) : 103 - 113
  • [5] Assessing online learning.
    Diaz, V
    REVIEW OF HIGHER EDUCATION, 2006, 29 (03): : 410 - 411
  • [6] Boundedly rational rule learning in a guessing game
    Stahl, DO
    GAMES AND ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR, 1996, 16 (02) : 303 - 330
  • [7] Universal Online Learning: an Optimistically Universal Learning Rule
    Blanchard, Moise
    CONFERENCE ON LEARNING THEORY, VOL 178, 2022, 178
  • [8] ONLINE LEARNING OF A TIME-DEPENDENT RULE
    BIEHL, M
    SCHWARZE, H
    EUROPHYSICS LETTERS, 1992, 20 (08): : 733 - 738
  • [9] Assessing Online Learning and the Digitalization of Assessment
    Barbera-Gregori, Elena
    Suarez-Guerrero, Cristobal
    RIED-REVISTA IBEROAMERICANA DE EDUCACION A DISTANCIA, 2021, 24 (02): : 33 - 40
  • [10] Learning by gaming - evaluation of an online game for children
    Lazareck, Lisa J.
    Farrell, David
    Kostkova, Patty
    Lecky, Donna M.
    McNulty, Cliodna A. M.
    Weerasinghe, Dasun
    2010 ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE IEEE ENGINEERING IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY SOCIETY (EMBC), 2010, : 2951 - 2954