Decision Making on Spatially Continuous Scales

A new diffusion model of decision making in continuous space is presented and tested. The model is a sequential sampling model in which both spatially continuously distributed evidence and noise are accumulated up to a decision criterion (a 1 dimensional [1D] line or a 2 dimensional [2D] plane). The...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological review 2018-11, Vol.125 (6), p.888-935
1. Verfasser: Ratcliff, Roger
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description A new diffusion model of decision making in continuous space is presented and tested. The model is a sequential sampling model in which both spatially continuously distributed evidence and noise are accumulated up to a decision criterion (a 1 dimensional [1D] line or a 2 dimensional [2D] plane). There are two major advances represented in this research. The first is to use spatially continuously distributed Gaussian noise in the decision process (Gaussian process or Gaussian random field noise) which allows the model to represent truly spatially continuous processes. The second is a series of experiments that collect data from a variety of tasks and response modes to provide the basis for testing the model. The model accounts for the distributions of responses over position and response time distributions for the choices. The model applies to tasks in which the stimulus and the response coincide (moving eyes or fingers to brightened areas in a field of pixels) and ones in which they do not (color, motion, and direction identification). The model also applies to tasks in which the response is made with eye movements, finger movements, or mouse movements. This modeling offers a wide potential scope of applications including application to any device or scale in which responses are made on a 1D continuous scale or in a 2D spatial field.
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subjects Adult
Decision Making
Decision Making - physiology
Eye Movements
Fingers
Fingers (Anatomy)
Human
Human mechanics
Human performance
Humans
Models, Psychological
Noise
Normal Distribution
Psychometrics - instrumentation
Psychometrics - methods
Psychomotor Performance - physiology
Reaction Time
Responses
Sampling
Simulation
Spatial analysis
Spatial Organization
Stimulus
Visual Perception - physiology
Young Adult
title Decision Making on Spatially Continuous Scales
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