Studying how individuals compare two given quantitative stimuli, say d1 and d2, is a fundamental problem. One very common way to address it is through ratio magnitude estimation, that is to ask individuals not to give values to d1 and d2 but rather to give their estimates of the ratio p = d1/d2 . Several psychophysical theories (the most known being Stevens’ power-law) claim that this ratio cannot be known directly and that there are cognitive distortions on the apprehension of the different quantities. These theories result in the so-called separable representations (which include Stevens’ model). In this paper, we propose a general statistical framework that allows for testing in a rigorous way whether the separable representation theory is grounded or not. We conclude in favour of it, but strongly reject Stevens’ model. As a byproduct, we provide estimates of the psychometric functions of interest.

Estimation of Separable Representations in Psychophysical Experiments

SERI, RAFFAELLO
2005-01-01

Abstract

Studying how individuals compare two given quantitative stimuli, say d1 and d2, is a fundamental problem. One very common way to address it is through ratio magnitude estimation, that is to ask individuals not to give values to d1 and d2 but rather to give their estimates of the ratio p = d1/d2 . Several psychophysical theories (the most known being Stevens’ power-law) claim that this ratio cannot be known directly and that there are cognitive distortions on the apprehension of the different quantities. These theories result in the so-called separable representations (which include Stevens’ model). In this paper, we propose a general statistical framework that allows for testing in a rigorous way whether the separable representation theory is grounded or not. We conclude in favour of it, but strongly reject Stevens’ model. As a byproduct, we provide estimates of the psychometric functions of interest.
2005
B.G. Bara, L. Barsalou, M. Bucciarelli
Proceedings of CogSci 2005, XXVII Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, Stresa (I), 21-23 July 2005
244
249
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
STATI UNITI D'AMERICA
Mahwah, NJ
9780976831815
Psychophysical experiments; Steven’s model; Separable representation
no
268
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
Bernasconi, M.; Choirat, C.; Seri, Raffaello
reserved
Contributo specifico in volume::Articolo in Volume
3
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/1503514
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