The confidence code: parietal alpha oscillations turn expectations into beliefs
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Metacognition, the ability to evaluate whether one’s decisions are correct, is crucial for adaptive behavior. However, confidence judgments are not bias-free: they can be systematically modulated by predictive cues and beliefs, favoring expectation-consistent judgments, while leaving metacognitive precision unchanged. Here, we identify parietal alpha activity as the causal mechanism linking expectations to metacognitive bias. In Study 1, EEG was recorded while 75 participants performed a visual detection task with symbolic cues signaling target probability. Cues induced a metacognitive bias in confidence without altering metacognitive sensitivity, and cue-driven alpha modulation over the right parietal cortex predicted the magnitude of this bias. In Study 2 (N = 88), continuous theta-burst stimulation (cTBS) over the right parietal cortex abolished cue-induced alpha modulation, thereby selectively reducing metacognitive bias, while sham stimulation had no effect. Together, these findings demonstrate that parietal alpha-mediated gain control causally shapes metacognitive judgments, revealing an oscillatory code for predictive metacognition.