- 著者
-
Alicia Izquierdo
Alexandra Stolyarova
Mohsen Rakhshan
Megan AK Peters
Hakwan Lau
Alireza Soltani
- 雑誌
- 第43回日本神経科学大会
- 巻号頁・発行日
- 2020-06-15
Studies in humans have revealed neural correlates of confidence in several regions, including in prefrontal cortex. However, it is still unclear which regions are causally involved in this process. I will present recent work where we trained rats to discriminate between ambiguous visual cues via spatial choices based on a learned stimulus-response rule. Following action selection using a touchscreen, rats expressed their confidence by time-wagering: they could wait for a variable amount of time before they could receive a possible reward or initiate a new trial. This design allowed us to measure confidence trial-by-trial. We found that waiting times increased with discrimination accuracy and were negatively correlated with response times, demonstrating that this measure could be used as a proxy for confidence. Following chemogenetic silencing of anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), waiting times became less diagnostic of perceptual uncertainty. We also computed metacognitive efficiency (meta-d'/d') that assesses how well waiting time tracked discrimination performance (d') across trials (Maniscalco & Lau, 2012), and found that this measure was significantly reduced following ACC inhibition. These results will be discussed in the context of our recent work in the orbitofrontal cortex and how animals may similarly show metacognition in more traditional reinforcement learning paradigms.