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PSYCHOPHYSICS What is Psychophysics? Classical Psychophysics Thresholds Signal Detection Theory Psychophysical Laws
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What is Psychophysics? Study of the relationship between physical properties and psychological experience
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Classical Psychophysics Assumption is that there is an absolute threshold - point above which a stimulus can always be detected and below which it can never be detected
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Method of Limits Increase the intensity until the observer reports detection (ascending series) Decrease the intensity until the observer no longer reports detection (descending series) Look for an average over a number of series
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Method of Adjustment Observer adjusts intensity until the stimulus is just detectable Can be done quickly, but results tend to be variable
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Method of Constant Stimuli A range of intensities is selected and presented in random order; observer responds “Yes” or “No” Include “catch trials” on which no stimulus is presented
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Do Absolute Thresholds exist? Gradual change from no detection to detection By convention, the threshold is the stimulus intensity at which the stimulus is detected 50% of the time
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What Classical Psychophysics predicts:
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What usually happens:
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Difference Threshold Smallest difference between stimuli that can be detected Standard stimulus is compared to comparison stimulus
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Signal Detection Theory How can we do psychophysics without absolute thresholds? Assumes that responses are a product of making decisions about signals embedded in noise
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What Determines Responses in SDT? sensitivity - ability to detect stimuli criterion - strategy for deciding how to respond
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What Affects Sensitivity? how good an observer you are signal to noise ratio
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What Affects the Criterion? payoff for responses probability that the stimulus will occur
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Psychophysics the SDT Way Present trials with the stimulus present and with the stimulus absent Observer can respond yes or no on each trial Sensitivity and criterion can be measured
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Psychophysics the SDT Way HitFalse Alarm Miss Correct Rejection Stimulus Present? YesNo Response No Yes
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Measuring Sensitivity When sensitivity is higher, there should be more hits and fewer false alarms d-prime (d’) is the standardized difference between the signal-present and signal-absent distributions
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Sensory Activity probability Signal Present Distribution
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Sensory Activity probability Signal Absent Distribution
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Sensory Activity probability AbsentPresent
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Sensory Activity probability d’
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Sensory Activity probability small d’
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Sensory Activity probability large d’
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Measuring the Criterion The criterion ( ) is the level of intensity at which the observer chooses to switch from “No” to “Yes” responses
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Sensory Activity probability Respond “No” Respond “Yes” Criterion
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Sensory Activity probability Lax Criterion
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Sensory Activity probability Strict Criterion
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Weber’s Law Describes how much of a physical difference is needed between two stimuli before people can just tell the difference (difference threshold or “just noticeable difference”) Works very well except at extremely low or high intensities
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Weber’s Law
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Example of Weber’s Law If a standard stimulus weighs 10 pounds, how much different would another stimulus have to be for the difference to be noticeable?
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Stevens’ Power Law Describes relationship between physical and psychological intensity Sensory magnitude is an exponential function of physical intensity Exponent >1: Response Expansion Exponent <1: Response Compression
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