4.7 Article

Weber's law in decision making: Integrating behavioral data in humans with a neurophysiological model

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 27, Issue 42, Pages 11192-11200

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1072-07.2007

Keywords

somatosensory; vibrotactile discrimination; decision making; Weber's law; multistability; stochastic neurodynamics; probabilistic behavior

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Funding

  1. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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Recent single-cell studies in monkeys(Romoet al., 2004) show that the activity of neurons in the ventral premotor cortex covaries with the animal's decisions in a perceptual comparison task regarding the frequency of vibrotactile events. The firing rate response of these neurons was dependent only on the frequency differences between the two applied vibrations, the sign of that difference being the determining factor for correct task performance. We present a biophysically realistic neurodynamical model that can account for the most relevant characteristics of this decision-making-related neural activity. One of the nontrivial predictions of this model is that Weber's law will underlie the perceptual discrimination behavior. We confirmed this prediction in behavioral tests of vibrotactile discrimination in humans and propose a computational explanation of perceptual discrimination that accounts naturally for the emergence of Weber's law. We conclude that the neurodynamical mechanisms and computational principles underlying the decision-making processes in this perceptual discrimination task are consistent with a fluctuation-driven scenario in a multistable regime.

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