Secondary motor integration as a final arbiter in sensorimotor decision-making.

Autor: Balsdon T; School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom., Verdonck S; Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium., Loossens T; Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium., Philiastides MG; School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: PLoS biology [PLoS Biol] 2023 Jul 17; Vol. 21 (7), pp. e3002200. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jul 17 (Print Publication: 2023).
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002200
Abstrakt: Sensorimotor decision-making is believed to involve a process of accumulating sensory evidence over time. While current theories posit a single accumulation process prior to planning an overt motor response, here, we propose an active role of motor processes in decision formation via a secondary leaky motor accumulation stage. The motor leak adapts the "memory" with which this secondary accumulator reintegrates the primary accumulated sensory evidence, thus adjusting the temporal smoothing in the motor evidence and, correspondingly, the lag between the primary and motor accumulators. We compare this framework against different single accumulator variants using formal model comparison, fitting choice, and response times in a task where human observers made categorical decisions about a noisy sequence of images, under different speed-accuracy trade-off instructions. We show that, rather than boundary adjustments (controlling the amount of evidence accumulated for decision commitment), adjustment of the leak in the secondary motor accumulator provides the better description of behavior across conditions. Importantly, we derive neural correlates of these 2 integration processes from electroencephalography data recorded during the same task and show that these neural correlates adhere to the neural response profiles predicted by the model. This framework thus provides a neurobiologically plausible description of sensorimotor decision-making that captures emerging evidence of the active role of motor processes in choice behavior.
Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
(Copyright: © 2023 Balsdon et al. 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 credited.)
Databáze: MEDLINE
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