Bayesian Inference for Evidence Accumulation Models with Regressors

Evidence accumulation models (EAMs) are an important class of cognitive models used to analyze both response time and response choice data recorded from decision-making tasks. Developments in estimation procedures have helped EAMs become important both in basic scientific applications and solution-f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors Dao, Viet Hung, Gunawan, David, Kohn, Robert, Tran, Minh-Ngoc, Hawkins, Guy E, Brown, Scott D
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 20.02.2023
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Summary:Evidence accumulation models (EAMs) are an important class of cognitive models used to analyze both response time and response choice data recorded from decision-making tasks. Developments in estimation procedures have helped EAMs become important both in basic scientific applications and solution-focussed applied work. Hierarchical Bayesian estimation frameworks for the linear ballistic accumulator model (LBA) and the diffusion decision model (DDM) have been widely used, but still suffer from some key limitations, particularly for large sample sizes, for models with many parameters, and when linking decision-relevant covariates to model parameters. We extend upon previous work with methods for estimating the LBA and DDM in hierarchical Bayesian frameworks that include random effects which are correlated between people, and include regression-model links between decision-relevant covariates and model parameters. Our methods work equally well in cases where the covariates are measured once per person (e.g., personality traits or psychological tests) or once per decision (e.g., neural or physiological data). We provide methods for exact Bayesian inference, using particle-based MCMC, and also approximate methods based on variational Bayesian (VB) inference. The VB methods are sufficiently fast and efficient that they can address large-scale estimation problems, such as with very large data sets. We evaluate the performance of these methods in applications to data from three existing experiments. Detailed algorithmic implementations and code are freely available for all methods.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2302.10389