학술논문

Gain control explains the effect of distraction in human perceptual, cognitive, and economic decision making
Document Type
Report
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. September 18, 2018, Vol. 115 Issue 38, pE8825, 10 p.
Subject
Cognition -- Research
Psychological research
Decision-making -- Psychological aspects -- Economic aspects
Perception -- Research
Science and technology
Language
English
ISSN
0027-8424
Abstract
When making decisions, humans are often distracted by irrelevant information. Distraction has a different impact on perceptual, cognitive, and value-guided choices, giving rise to well-described behavioral phenomena such as the tilt illusion, conflict adaptation, or economic decoy effects. However, a single, unified model that can account for all these phenomena has yet to emerge. Here, we offer one such account, based on adaptive gain control, and additionally show that it successfully predicts a range of counterintuitive new behavioral phenomena on variants of a classic cognitive paradigm, the Eriksen flanker task. We also report that blood oxygen level-dependent signals in a dorsal network prominently including the anterior cingulate cortex index a gainmodulated decision variable predicted by the model. This work unifies the study of distraction across perceptual, cognitive, and economic domains. cognitive control | tilt illusion | decoy effects | gain control anterior cingulate cortex