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Hysteresis as an Implicit Prior in Tactile Spatial Decision Making

Perceptual decisions not only depend on the incoming information from sensory systems but constitute a combination of current sensory evidence and internally accumulated information from past encounters. Although recent evidence emphasizes the fundamental role of prior knowledge for perceptual decis...

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Autores principales: Thiel, Sabrina D., Bitzer, Sebastian, Nierhaus, Till, Kalberlah, Christian, Preusser, Sven, Neumann, Jane, Nikulin, Vadim V., van der Meer, Elke, Villringer, Arno, Pleger, Burkhard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3935932/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24587045
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089802
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author Thiel, Sabrina D.
Bitzer, Sebastian
Nierhaus, Till
Kalberlah, Christian
Preusser, Sven
Neumann, Jane
Nikulin, Vadim V.
van der Meer, Elke
Villringer, Arno
Pleger, Burkhard
author_facet Thiel, Sabrina D.
Bitzer, Sebastian
Nierhaus, Till
Kalberlah, Christian
Preusser, Sven
Neumann, Jane
Nikulin, Vadim V.
van der Meer, Elke
Villringer, Arno
Pleger, Burkhard
author_sort Thiel, Sabrina D.
collection PubMed
description Perceptual decisions not only depend on the incoming information from sensory systems but constitute a combination of current sensory evidence and internally accumulated information from past encounters. Although recent evidence emphasizes the fundamental role of prior knowledge for perceptual decision making, only few studies have quantified the relevance of such priors on perceptual decisions and examined their interplay with other decision-relevant factors, such as the stimulus properties. In the present study we asked whether hysteresis, describing the stability of a percept despite a change in stimulus property and known to occur at perceptual thresholds, also acts as a form of an implicit prior in tactile spatial decision making, supporting the stability of a decision across successively presented random stimuli (i.e., decision hysteresis). We applied a variant of the classical 2-point discrimination task and found that hysteresis influenced perceptual decision making: Participants were more likely to decide ‘same’ rather than ‘different’ on successively presented pin distances. In a direct comparison between the influence of applied pin distances (explicit stimulus property) and hysteresis, we found that on average, stimulus property explained significantly more variance of participants’ decisions than hysteresis. However, when focusing on pin distances at threshold, we found a trend for hysteresis to explain more variance. Furthermore, the less variance was explained by the pin distance on a given decision, the more variance was explained by hysteresis, and vice versa. Our findings suggest that hysteresis acts as an implicit prior in tactile spatial decision making that becomes increasingly important when explicit stimulus properties provide decreasing evidence.
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spelling pubmed-39359322014-03-04 Hysteresis as an Implicit Prior in Tactile Spatial Decision Making Thiel, Sabrina D. Bitzer, Sebastian Nierhaus, Till Kalberlah, Christian Preusser, Sven Neumann, Jane Nikulin, Vadim V. van der Meer, Elke Villringer, Arno Pleger, Burkhard PLoS One Research Article Perceptual decisions not only depend on the incoming information from sensory systems but constitute a combination of current sensory evidence and internally accumulated information from past encounters. Although recent evidence emphasizes the fundamental role of prior knowledge for perceptual decision making, only few studies have quantified the relevance of such priors on perceptual decisions and examined their interplay with other decision-relevant factors, such as the stimulus properties. In the present study we asked whether hysteresis, describing the stability of a percept despite a change in stimulus property and known to occur at perceptual thresholds, also acts as a form of an implicit prior in tactile spatial decision making, supporting the stability of a decision across successively presented random stimuli (i.e., decision hysteresis). We applied a variant of the classical 2-point discrimination task and found that hysteresis influenced perceptual decision making: Participants were more likely to decide ‘same’ rather than ‘different’ on successively presented pin distances. In a direct comparison between the influence of applied pin distances (explicit stimulus property) and hysteresis, we found that on average, stimulus property explained significantly more variance of participants’ decisions than hysteresis. However, when focusing on pin distances at threshold, we found a trend for hysteresis to explain more variance. Furthermore, the less variance was explained by the pin distance on a given decision, the more variance was explained by hysteresis, and vice versa. Our findings suggest that hysteresis acts as an implicit prior in tactile spatial decision making that becomes increasingly important when explicit stimulus properties provide decreasing evidence. Public Library of Science 2014-02-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3935932/ /pubmed/24587045 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089802 Text en © 2014 Thiel et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Thiel, Sabrina D.
Bitzer, Sebastian
Nierhaus, Till
Kalberlah, Christian
Preusser, Sven
Neumann, Jane
Nikulin, Vadim V.
van der Meer, Elke
Villringer, Arno
Pleger, Burkhard
Hysteresis as an Implicit Prior in Tactile Spatial Decision Making
title Hysteresis as an Implicit Prior in Tactile Spatial Decision Making
title_full Hysteresis as an Implicit Prior in Tactile Spatial Decision Making
title_fullStr Hysteresis as an Implicit Prior in Tactile Spatial Decision Making
title_full_unstemmed Hysteresis as an Implicit Prior in Tactile Spatial Decision Making
title_short Hysteresis as an Implicit Prior in Tactile Spatial Decision Making
title_sort hysteresis as an implicit prior in tactile spatial decision making
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3935932/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24587045
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089802
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