Testing models of decision making using confidence ratings in classification.

Classification implies decision making (or response selection) of some kind. Studying the decision process using a traditional signal detection theory analysis is difficult for two reasons: (a) The model makes a strong assumption about the encoding process (normal noise), and (b) the two most popular decision models, optimal and distance-from-criterion models, can mimic each other's predictions about performance level. In this article, the authors show that by analyzing certain distributional properties of confidence ratings, a researcher can determine whether the decision process is optimal, without knowing the form of the encoding distributions. Empirical results are reported for three types of experiments: recognition memory, perceptual discrimination, and perceptual categorization. In each case, the data strongly favored the distance-from-criterion model over the optimal model.

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