Comparing Bayesian and non-Bayesian accounts of human confidence reports
William T Adler and
Wei Ji Ma
PLOS Computational Biology, 2018, vol. 14, issue 11, 1-34
Abstract:
Humans can meaningfully report their confidence in a perceptual or cognitive decision. It is widely believed that these reports reflect the Bayesian probability that the decision is correct, but this hypothesis has not been rigorously tested against non-Bayesian alternatives. We use two perceptual categorization tasks in which Bayesian confidence reporting requires subjects to take sensory uncertainty into account in a specific way. We find that subjects do take sensory uncertainty into account when reporting confidence, suggesting that brain areas involved in reporting confidence can access low-level representations of sensory uncertainty, a prerequisite of Bayesian inference. However, behavior is not fully consistent with the Bayesian hypothesis and is better described by simple heuristic models that use uncertainty in a non-Bayesian way. Both conclusions are robust to changes in the uncertainty manipulation, task, response modality, model comparison metric, and additional flexibility in the Bayesian model. Our results suggest that adhering to a rational account of confidence behavior may require incorporating implementational constraints.Author summary: Humans are able to report a sense of confidence in decisions that we make. It is widely hypothesized that confidence reflects the computed probability that a decision is accurate; however, this hypothesis has not been fully explored. We use several human behavioral experiments to test a variety of models that may be considered to be distinct hypotheses about the computational underpinnings of confidence. We find that reported confidence does not appear to reflect the probability that a decision is correct, but instead emerges from a heuristic approximation of this probability.
Date: 2018
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1006572
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006572
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