Litcius/Paper detail

Expectations about precision bias metacognition and awareness.

Helen Olawole‐Scott, Daniel Yon

2023Journal of Experimental Psychology General28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

about the precision of their perceptions and use these to guide metacognition and awareness. Here we test this possibility. Participants made perceptual decisions about visual motion stimuli, while providing confidence ratings (Experiments 1 and 2) or ratings of subjective visibility (Experiment 3). In each experiment, participants acquired probabilistic expectations about the likely strength of upcoming signals. We found these expectations about precision altered metacognition and awareness-with participants feeling more confident and stimuli appearing more vivid when stronger sensory signals were expected, without concomitant changes in objective perceptual performance. Computational modeling revealed that this effect could be well explained by a predictive learning model that infers the precision (strength) of current signals as a weighted combination of incoming evidence and top-down expectation. These results support an influential but untested tenet of Bayesian models of cognition, suggesting that agents do not only "read out" the reliability of information arriving at their senses, but also take into account prior knowledge about how reliable or "precise" different sources of information are likely to be. This reveals that expectations about precision influence how the sensory world appears and how much we trust our senses. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyInferenceMetacognitionBayesian inferencePerceptionConstruct (python library)Cognitive psychologyReliability (semiconductor)Bayesian probabilityFeelingCognitionArtificial intelligenceSocial psychologyComputer sciencePower (physics)Programming languageQuantum mechanicsNeurosciencePhysicsNeural dynamics and brain functionFace Recognition and PerceptionNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies