Metacognition is “cognition about cognition” (Flavell,
1979). This higher-order ability is related to various cognitive processes such as decision-making, behavioral adaptation (Brown,
1987), and learning (Schraw et al.,
2006). One of the most prominent aspects of metacognition stems from one’s ability to report their own errors/performance correctly, referred to as error/performance monitoring (Yeung & Summerfield,
2014). Although this ability was observed in many domains, including interval timing, no study has investigated whether humans can monitor the accuracy of their simultaneity judgments when interrogated as a function of relative temporal latencies (i.e., subjective asynchronies) between two stimuli.
The simultaneity perception is typically investigated with the temporal order judgments (TOJ), where participants report which of the two stimuli was presented first (Kostaki & Vatakis,
2018). Thus, instead of explicitly timed, TOJs are inferred from the arrival latencies (due to delays in reaching sensory organs and their neural transduction/processing) of stimuli (Sternberg & Knoll,
1973; also see Kostaki & Vatakis,
2018). This brings about distinctive cognitive processing concerning performed timing behaviors with motor input, such as reproducing a target time by demarcating elapsed time (i.e., temporal reproduction). We investigated whether humans can keep track of the accuracy of their simultaneity perception with respect to the subjective asynchronies of two stimuli.
The error monitoring aspect of metacognition is keeping track of an agent’s errors without requiring external feedback. In its explicit form, error monitoring is operationalized by the overall match between the objective accuracy and the subjective confidence rating regarding the accuracy of the decision (e.g., “How confident are you that your response is correct?”; for a detailed discussion, see Fleming,
2014). Error monitoring performance has mostly been investigated in perceptual decision-making and memory domains. Overall, these studies showed that humans can adjust their relative confidence according to the decision accuracy in both perceptual (e.g., Fleming & Dolan,
2012b,
2012c; also see Fleming et al.,
2012a) and memory domains (e.g., Vandenbroucke et al.,
2014) but these domains limit the nature of error monitoring to only categorical judgments that can be either correct or incorrect (categorical errors). However, in many real-life situations, judgments can deviate from an objective target at different degrees and in different directions, attributing explicit metric properties to errors (as opposed to performance that is merely binary in its psychometric nature). For example, one can be late or early (direction) for an appointment by 5–45 min (magnitude). Thus, a more comprehensive, complete, and generalizable investigation of error monitoring requires considering the explicit metric, in addition to the categorical, characteristics in error monitoring studies, which captures both continuous (in the form of magnitude) and categorical (in the form of relative direction) features of the decisions made in many daily life situations
1.
To this end, recent studies investigated the error monitoring abilities in metric domains such as time, space, and number. For instance, Akdoğan and Balcı (
2017) tested participants in a temporal reproduction task where participants reproduced a given target duration by button presses. After each reproduction, participants reported their subjective confidence regarding the proximity of their reproduction to the given target duration. Finally, participants were asked to report whether their reproduction was shorter or longer than the target duration. They showed that participants could correctly report the magnitude and direction of their temporal errors (aka temporal error monitoring). Crucially, this ability has been replicated many times in temporal (e.g., Öztel & Balcı,
2021, Öztel & Balcı,
2023a;
2023bb) and other magnitude domains such as space (e.g., line length estimations as in Duyan & Balcı,
2020; orientation estimations as in Bertana et al.,
2021; see also Recht et al.,
2021) and number (e.g., Duyan & Balcı,
2018,
2019), pointing to the domain-general characteristics of this ability (for a detailed discussion see Yallak & Balcı,
2021). These results suggest an extended scope of metacognitive abilities that can also take metric forms (“metric error monitoring ability” - for a detailed discussion, see Öztel & Balcı,
2024).
With their current methodological approach, metric error monitoring studies capture the metric characteristics of errors associated only with the explicit prospective timing of a single stimulus, which typically requires a motor output. One recent study contrasted the temporal error monitoring abilities across performed vs. observed errors in the temporal reproduction task and found that the agency manipulation affected the two aspects of temporal error monitoring differentially (i.e., confidence and error directionality judgments - Oztel & Balci,
2024). However, no study has investigated how relative subjective asynchronies (perceived passively instead of explicitly as in earlier tasks) are involved in error monitoring processes of simultaneity perception.
One methodological approach to quantify subjective asynchronies is via the TOJ task. In this task, participants are demonstrated asynchronously presented two stimuli with different stimulus onset asynchronies (SOA) in the subsecond range and asked to report which stimulus appeared first (e.g., “left” or “right” stimulus). The median value of the psychometric function fitted to the response probabilities corresponds to the point of subjective simultaneity (PSS), which refers to the time point at which participants perceive two stimuli as simultaneously presented (for a detailed discussion, see Kostaki & Vatakis,
2018). Thus, subjective asynchrony can be quantified between the experimental SOA (an index of objective simultaneity of two stimuli) and the PSS.
These methodological characteristics can also reflect itself in cognitive forms, imposed by the fact that TOJ and reproduction tasks capture different interval ranges (“automatic timing” that concerns subsecond intervals as in TOJ and “cognitively controlled timing” that concerns supra-second intervals as in reproduction; Buhusi & Meck,
2005). As a result, the inference of TOJ from the passive perceptual processing of stimuli (e.g., as opposed to explicit timing) renders it a relatively instantaneous operation compared to temporal reproductions. The neural counterparts of this cognitive difference have also been documented. For subsecond timing (automatic timing), supplementary motor area (SMA), primary motor cortex, and primary sensory cortex are implicated, while for suprasecond timing (cognitively controlled timing), dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dLPFC), intraparietal sulcus, premotor cortex are implicated (Buhusi & Meck,
2005). Due to these critical differences, the results obtained from the earlier temporal error monitoring studies cannot be generalized to error monitoring dynamics in simultaneity perception. This shortcoming highlights a crucial gap in the current literature on metric error monitoring.
Reporting confidence in TOJ tasks has been occasionally documented in the literature (e.g., Faivre et al.,
2020; Craig,
2005). For example, in a recent study, Faivre and colleagues (
2020) tested participants in a TOJ task to investigate the effect of sensorimotor conflict on metacognitive performance. After each judgment, participants rated their confidence level regarding the accuracy of their responses. However, they did not investigate error monitoring of the metric characteristics of the TOJ. In another study, Craig (
2005) investigated the trajectory effects on the TOJ, such that the direction of the movement could change the TOJ in three experiments. The first two experiments pointed out that the trajectory effect is especially pronounced for the cases where the SOA is relatively short. Craig (
2005) asked participants to report their confidence level in the final experiment to test whether subjective confidence judgments might drive this effect. However, these authors did not investigate the metacognitive aspects of TOJ, either. Finally, Keane and colleagues (
2020) investigated the confidence judgments in TOJ concerning the effect of rapid temporal recalibration (i.e., the effect of two stimuli to be perceived as appearing simultaneously after a brief asynchronous presentation of them). They found a negative recalibration in the form of a general decrease in confidence judgments as a function of repeated same-SOA consecution (Keane et al.,
2020). Still, none of these studies investigated the error monitoring dynamics in simultaneity perception.
Current study
In four experiments, the current study investigated whether humans can monitor errors in their simultaneity perception as a function of subjective asynchronies, which has not been addressed in previous studies. Participants were tested in TOJ tasks where they reported which of the two visual stimuli appeared first (left or right in the first three experiments and top or bottom in the last experiment). After each response, participants reported their subjective confidence regarding the accuracy of their judgment. If the participants could monitor their simultaneity perceptions, a) their confidence ratings should increase and decrease as a function of absolute SOAs for correct and incorrect responses, respectively (due to higher discriminability with increased SOA, which is also associated with accuracy (e.g., Kepecs et al.,
2008; Sanders et al.,
2016). Additionally, if the simultaneity monitoring depends on subjective asynchronies, participants’ confidence ratings should be modulated by the match between their TOJ and subjective simultaneity. Furthermore, potential asymmetries in metacognitive abilities across the response codes could indicate a metacognitive spatial-temporal association of response codes (STEARC) effect, which refers to faster left-mapped responses for smaller magnitudes (e.g., Ishihara et al.,
2008; Dehaene et al.,
1993; Gevers et al.,
2004; for a detailed review see Bonato et al.,
2012). This potential metacognitive asymmetry will also be tested in the current study. Finally, if participants cannot monitor their simultaneity perception, the confidence judgements should not be reliably predicted by the subjective asynchronies, regardless of the accuracy and response type (i.e., “left/right first” as in the first three experiments or “bottom/top first” as in the fourth experiment).