The presence of irrelevant alternatives paradoxically increases confidence in perceptual decisions
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Sigman, Mariano
Comay, Nicolás
Della Bella, Gabriel
Lamberti, Pedro
Solovey, Guillermo
Barttfeld, Pablo
Date:
2023Abstract
Confidence in perceptual decisions is thought to reflect the probability of being correct.
According to this view, confidence should be unaffected or minimally reduced by the
presence of irrelevant alternatives. To test this prediction, we designed five experiments.
In Experiment 1, participants had to identify the largest geometrical shape among two or
three alternatives. In the three-alternative condition, one of the shapes was much
smaller than the other two, being a clearly incorrect option. Counter-intuitively,
confidence was higher when the irrelevant alternative was present, evidencing that
confidence construction is more complex than previously thought. Four computational
models were tested, only one of them accounting for the results. This model predicts
that confidence increases monotonically with the number of irrelevant alternatives, a
prediction we tested in Experiment 2. In Experiment 3, we evaluated whether this effect
replicated in a categorical task, but we did not find supporting evidence. Experiments 4
and 5 allowed us to discard stimuli presentation time as a factor driving the effect. Our
findings suggest that confidence models cannot ignore the effect of multiple, possibly
irrelevant alternatives to build a thorough understanding of confidence.
Este documento es una versión del artículo que se encuentra publicado en Cognition, 234, 105377
URI:
https://repositorio.utdt.edu/handle/20.500.13098/11886https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105377