“…For example, the stream/bounce effect for which two objects moving towards each other are more likely to be perceived as bouncing than as streaming if a sound is presented at the moment the objects meet (Sekuler, Sekuler, & Lau, 1997) has recently been attributable to decisional processes because an effect was observed in c and not in d′ (Grove, Ashton, Kawachi, & Sakurai, 2012; see below for other examples). Even in studies that report an effect on d′, the idea that signal detection parameters can, in and of themselves, distinguish between a perceptual effect and an effect on decision processes is commonly expressed (Cardoso-Leite, Mamassian, Schutz-Bosbach, & Waszak, 2010;Lippert, Logothetis, & Kayser, 2007;Liu, Mercado, & Church, 2011;McDonald, Teder-Salejarvi, & Hillyard, 2000;Meteyard, Bahrami, & Vigliocco, 2007;Shams & Kim, 2010). This misunderstanding of the claims that can be made based on signal detection measures has led to many potentially incorrect conclusions, and it is conceivable that some stimulating and intriguing findings might not have been submitted or accepted for publication due to the misinterpretation that effects on the criterion necessarily reflected decision-based processes and not perceptual processes.…”