TY - JOUR T1 - Revealing subthreshold motor contributions to perceptual confidence JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/330605 SP - 330605 AU - Thibault Gajdos AU - Stephen M. Fleming AU - Marta Saez Garcia AU - Gabriel Weindel AU - Karen Davranche Y1 - 2018/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/05/25/330605.abstract N2 - Established models of perceptual metacognition, the ability to evaluate our perceptual judgments, posit that perceptual confidence depends on the strength or quality of feedforward sensory evidence. However, alternative theoretical accounts suggest the entire perception-action cycle, and not only variation in sensory evidence, is monitored when evaluating confidence in one’s percepts. Such models lead to the counterintuitive prediction that perceptual confidence should be directly modulated by features of motor output. To evaluate this proposal here we recorded electromyographic (EMG) activity of motor effectors while subjects performed a near-threshold perceptual discrimination task and reported their confidence in each response. A subset of trials exhibited sub-threshold EMG activity in response effectors before a decision was made. Strikingly, trial-by-trial analysis showed that confidence, but not accuracy, was significantly higher on trials with subthreshold motor activation. These findings support a hypothesis that preparatory motor activity impacts upon confidence over and above performance, consistent with models in which perceptual metacognition integrates information across the perception-action cycle. ER -