The Neurobiology of Confidence: From Beliefs to Neurons.

Torben Ott, Paul Masset, Adam Kepecs
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

How confident are you? As humans, aware of our subjective sense of confidence, we can readily answer. Knowing your level of confidence helps to optimize both routine decisions such as whether to go back and check if the front door was locked and momentous ones like finding a partner for life. Yet the inherently subjective nature of confidence has limited investigations by neurobiologists. Here, we provide an overview of recent advances in this field and lay out a conceptual framework that lets us translate psychological questions about subjective confidence into the language of neuroscience. We show how statistical notions of confidence provide a bridge between our subjective sense of confidence and confidence-guided behaviors in nonhuman animals, thus enabling the study of the underlying neurobiology. We discuss confidence as a core cognitive process that enables organisms to optimize behavior such as learning or resource allocation and that serves as the basis of metacognitive reasoning. These approaches place confidence on a solid footing and pave the way for a mechanistic understanding of how the brain implements confidence-based algorithms to guide behavior.

信心的神经生物学:从信念到神经元。
你有多自信?作为人类,意识到我们主观的自信感,我们可以很容易地回答。了解自己的自信程度有助于优化日常决策(如是否回去检查前门是否锁上了)和重大决策(如寻找终身伴侣)。然而,信心固有的主观性限制了神经生物学家的研究。在这里,我们概述了这一领域的最新进展,并提出了一个概念框架,使我们能够将有关主观自信的心理问题转化为神经科学的语言。我们展示了信心的统计概念如何在我们的主观自信感和非人类动物的自信引导行为之间架起一座桥梁,从而使潜在的神经生物学研究成为可能。我们讨论了信心作为核心认知过程,使生物体能够优化行为,如学习或资源分配,并作为元认知推理的基础。这些方法将信心建立在坚实的基础上,并为理解大脑如何实现基于信心的算法来指导行为铺平了道路。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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