“…In these models, evidence is first extracted from the stimuli and then accumulated over time until a decision boundary is reached and a response initiated. Among the many evidence-accumulation models, the DDM is the most widely applied, not only in psychology, but also in economics and neuroscience, accounting for experiments ranging from decision making under time-pressure (Dutilh, Krypotos, & Wagenmakers, 2011;Leite, Ratcliff, Lette, & Ratcliff, 2010;Voss, Rothermund, & Brandtstädter, 2008), prospective memory (Ball & Aschenbrenner, 2018;Horn, Bayen, & Smith, 2011) to cognitive control (Gomez, Ratcliff, & Perea, 2007;Schmitz & Voss, 2012). (2) the separation of the two response boundaries (a), representing response caution; (3) the mean starting point of evidence accumulation (z), representing response bias; and (4) mean non-decision time (T er ), which is the sum of times for stimulus encoding and response execution.…”