4.3 Article

An adaptive drift-diffusion model of interval timing dynamics

期刊

BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES
卷 95, 期 -, 页码 90-99

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.beproc.2013.02.003

关键词

Interval timing; Drift-diffusion processes; Cyclic schedules; Learning; Computational models; Pigeons

资金

  1. Royal Military College of Canada
  2. Canada's ELAP
  3. NIH [AG024361]
  4. Princeton Pyne Fund

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Animals readily learn the timing between salient events. They can even adapt their timed responding to rapidly changing intervals, sometimes as quickly as a single trial. Recently, drift-diffusion models widely used to model response times in decision making have been extended with new learning rules that allow them to accommodate steady-state interval timing, including scalar timing and timescale invariance. These time-adaptive drift-diffusion models (TDDMs) work by accumulating evidence of elapsing time through their drift rate, thereby encoding the to-be-timed interval. One outstanding challenge for these models lies in the dynamics of interval timing when the to-be-timed intervals are non-stationary. On these schedules, animals often fail to exhibit strict timescale invariance, as expected by the TDDMs and most other timing models. Here, we introduce a simple extension to these TDDMs, where the response threshold is a linear function of the observed event rate. This new model compares favorably against the basic TDDMs and the multiple-time-scale (MTS) habituation model when evaluated against three published datasets on timing dynamics in pigeons. Our results suggest that the threshold for triggering responding in interval timing changes as a function of recent intervals. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: SQAB 2012. Crown Copyright (C) 2013 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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