No abstract
An adaptive procedure for rapid and efficient psychophysical testing is described. PEST (Parameter Estimation by Sequential Testing) was designed with maximally efficient trial-by-trial sequential decisions at each stimulus level, in a sequence which tends to converge on a selected target level. An appendix introduces an approach to measuring test efficiency as applied to psychophysical testing problems.
A series of experiments measured human ability to discriminate between durations of auditory signals presented in a noise background. Independent variables were the signal voltage, the "base" duration T, and the increment duration/xT. Separate experiments assessed the effect of each of these on discrimination.A decision-theoretical model is presented, based on a "counting mechanism," which operates on impulses generated over the relevant durations. The source of these impulses is assumed to be random. Limitations on performance come from uncertainty regarding the end points of the time interval and from limited memory. The decision processes underlying the model are presented as a general theory of duration discrimination. HESE experiments measured the ability of human observers to discriminate differences in duration between short auditory signals. An understanding of time judgment is important for theories of signal detection, since detection depends on attention during the time of the signal, and only during that time. A practical problem related to temporal discrimination arises in speech perception, where cues to linguistic meaning in some languages, and cues to stress and inflection in English, seem to depend on relative duration (cf. Peterson and Lehiste•). A quantitative theory of temporal discrimination is developed to account for discrimination in the range ordinarily covered by speech sounds and the signals used in psychoacoustic experiments.The study of time discrimination is a poor stepchild of the growth of psychophysical research. Titchener 2 characterized the area as a "microcosm, perfect to the last detail," exemplifying in miniature the course of development to that time of psychophysical methods, concepts, and empirical knowledge. Study of temporal discrimination, and the estimation of time, has remained a microcosm, somewhat isolated from the main stream of empirical research on sensory capacities.A reason for this neglect was pointed out by Nichols a in an early, scholarly, historical review of the philosophy and psychology of time. This was the problematic status of the "time sense" as an independent psychic faculty, aside from the content of sensory input. The question has not yet been resolved, and continues to haunt the researches and theoretical efforts of psychologists.Reviews of the experimental literature after Nichols' were presented by Dunlap, . et al., 7 and most recently by Wallace and Rabin. 8 Chapters on time perception were offered by Titchener, 2 by Boring, 9 and by Woodrow. •ø With all this activity, we still find that there is "... as yet no generally accepted view as to how we perceive or estimate time, "7 and fourteen years later we find ourselves still on the trail of the "hitherto elusive 'time sense'. ,,s Although an experiment by Stott n was primarily concerned with the analysis of "time errors," enough data were reported to draw some conclusions about the temporal sensitivity of his observers. The observations were made in a group setting, and the data were averaged o...
Models of discrimination based on statistical decision theory distinguish sensitivity (the ability of an observer to reflect a stimulus-response correspondence denned by the experimenter) from response bias (the tendency to favor 1 response over others). Measures of response bias have received less attention than those of sensitivity. Bias measures are classified here according to 1 characteristics. First, the distributions assumed or implied to underlie the observer's decision may be normal, logistic, or rectangular. Second, the bias index may measure criterion location, criterion location relative to sensitivity, or likelihood ratio. Both parametric and "nonparametric" indexes are classified in this manner. The various bias statistics are compared on pragmatic and theoretical grounds, and it is concluded that criterion location measures have many advantages in empirical work. We are grateful to Howard Kaplan for many useful discussions of these issues. We also thank Doris Aaronson, reviewers A. E. Dusoir and J. G. Snodgrass, and an anonymous reviewer for helpful comments on previous drafts.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.