The effects of non-diagnostic information on confidence and decision making
Amelia T. Kohl, James D. Sauer, Matthew A. Palmer, Jasmin Brooks, Andrew Heathcote

TL;DR
This study explores how non-diagnostic information affects confidence and decision-making in perceptual tasks.
Contribution
The paper empirically validates the doubt-scaling model's predictions about non-diagnostic information's impact on confidence and accuracy.
Findings
Increasing non-diagnostic information reduced confidence and accuracy in perceptual tasks.
Non-diagnostic information generally slowed response times and increased error speed.
Results were replicated in a decision-only task, supporting the doubt-scaling model.
Abstract
Many decision-making tasks are characterized by a combination of diagnostic and non-diagnostic information, yet models of responding and confidence almost exclusively focus on the contribution of diagnostic information (e.g., evidence associated with stimulus discriminability), largely ignoring the contribution of non-diagnostic information. An exception is Baranski and Petrusic’s Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 24(3), 929-945, (1998) doubt-scaling model, which predicts a negative relationship between non-diagnostic information and confidence, and between non-diagnostic information and accuracy. In two perceptual-choice tasks, we tested the effects of manipulating non-diagnostic information on confidence, accuracy and response time (RT). In Experiment 1, participants viewed a dynamic grid consisting of flashing blue, orange and white pixels and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics · Visual perception and processing mechanisms
