Authors
Jan Willem De Gee, Tomas Knapen, Tobias H Donner
Publication date
2014/2/4
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
111
Issue
5
Pages
E618-E625
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
A number of studies have shown that pupil size increases transiently during effortful decisions. These decision-related changes in pupil size are mediated by central neuromodulatory systems, which also influence the internal state of brain regions engaged in decision making. It has been proposed that pupil-linked neuromodulatory systems are activated by the termination of decision processes, and, consequently, that these systems primarily affect the postdecisional brain state. Here, we present pupil results that run contrary to this proposal, suggesting an important intradecisional role. We measured pupil size while subjects formed protracted decisions about the presence or absence (“yes” vs. “no”) of a visual contrast signal embedded in dynamic noise. Linear systems analysis revealed that the pupil was significantly driven by a sustained input throughout the course of the decision formation. This sustained …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JW De Gee, T Knapen, TH Donner - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2014