Perceptual judgments are often influenced by goals and preferences, resulting in biased judgments that deviate from objective reality. When presented with ambiguous images, observers are biased to report seeing images associated with rewards. However, it remains unclear whether this is driven by a bias toward stimuli that are desirable or stimuli that are motivationally salient. As rewards are both desirable and motivationally salient, these effects are not easily dissociated in a reward context. This study investigates the effects of desirability and motivational salience on perceptual judgments in an aversive context involving financial losses. Across two experiments conducted between 2023 and 2024, participants completed a visual categorization task where ambiguous stimuli were associated with a large financial loss. Participants' perceptual judgments were biased away from stimuli associated with the loss, indicating a desirability bias. Drift diffusion model analyses revealed that this bias was due to a shift in the starting point of evidence accumulation, such that participants required more evidence to commit to a response associated with an undesirable outcome. The bias in starting point correlated with individual differences in punishment sensitivity but not reward sensitivity, highlighting how individual traits shape motivational effects on perceptual decisions. Results replicated across an in-lab sample and a larger online sample. Altogether, our study provides robust evidence of a desirability bias in perceptual decisions involving financial losses, identifying both the computational mechanisms and trait-level differences that influence how people decide what they see when faced with the prospect of undesirable outcomes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/emo0001511 | DOI Listing |
ObjectiveThis study investigates the effects of workload and task priority on multitasking performance and reliance on Level 1 Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI) systems in high-stakes decision environments.BackgroundOperators in critical settings manage multiple tasks under varying levels of workload and priority, potentially leading to performance degradation. XAI offers opportunities to support decision making by providing insights into AI's reasoning, yet its adoption and effectiveness in multitasking scenarios remain underexplored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Psychol
March 2025
School of Psychology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, 30332, USA.
It is well known that sensory information from one modality can automatically affect judgments from a different sensory modality. However, it remains unclear what determines the strength of the influence of an irrelevant sensory cue from one modality on a perceptual judgment for a different modality. Here we test whether the strength of multisensory impact by an irrelevant sensory cue depends on participants' objective accuracy or subjective confidence for that cue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurosci
March 2025
Department of Psychology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem 9190501, Israel.
Interval timing, the ability of animals to estimate the passage of time, is thought to involve diverse neural processes rather than a single central "clock" (Paton & Buonomano, 2018). Each of the different processes engaged in interval timing follows a different dynamic path, according to its specific function. For example, attention tracks anticipated events, such as offsets of intervals (Rohenkohl & Nobre, 2011), while motor processes control the timing of the behavioral output (De Lafuente et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroimage
March 2025
Inkendaal Rehabilitation Hospital, Vlezenbeek, Belgium; Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Faculty of Psychology, Educational Sciences and Speech and Language therapy, Brussels, Belgium.
Maturation of the auditory system in early childhood significantly influences the development of language-related perceptual and cognitive abilities. This study aims to provide insights into the neurophysiological changes underlying auditory processing and speech-sound discrimination in the first two years of life. We conducted a study using high-density electroencephalography (EEG) to longitudinally record cortical auditory event-related potentials (CAEP) in response to synthesized syllable sounds with pitch/duration change in a cohort of 79 extremely and very preterm-born infants without developmental disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pathol Inform
April 2025
Institute Division of Medical Image Computing, German Cancer Research Center, (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany.
Digital pathology offers a groundbreaking opportunity to transform clinical practice in histopathological image analysis, yet faces a significant hurdle: the substantial file sizes of pathological whole slide images (WSIs). Whereas current digital pathology solutions rely on lossy JPEG compression to address this issue, lossy compression can introduce color and texture disparities, potentially impacting clinical decision-making. Whereas prior research addresses perceptual image quality and downstream performance independently of each other, we jointly evaluate compression schemes for perceptual and downstream task quality on four different datasets.
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