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Psychophysical Methods Perception Lecture 2504

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Title: Psychophysical Methods Perception Lecture 2504


1
Psychophysical MethodsPerception Lecture2/5/04
  • Perception Lecture
  • 2/5/04

2
Why We Need Methods
  • Our senses convey information we need to
    interpret and respond to stimuli of light,
    chemicals, mechanical pressure, and temperature.
  • How can we respond so quickly to the endless flow
    of inputs from our environment?
  • What can be learned by investigating our sensory
    mechanisms and their relationship to both
    physiological and psychological phenomena?

3
What Methods?
  • The field of psychophysics examines this
    relationship between physical stimuli in our
    environment and our psychological reactions or
    behavior to them.
  • Although the physical events around us can be
    measured, they are perceived subjectively in a
    way that is difficult to measure.

4
Introduction
  • Psychophysical techniques have served as keys to
    unlocking the mysteries of human perceptual
    processes.
  • The tools of the psychophysicist are independent
    variables (e.g., light, sound, or mechanical
    pressure), and dependent variables -- behavioral
    responses of various kinds, such as vocalizations
    (e.g., I saw it) or button presses.

5
Some Methods
  • To use an analogy imagine you have a complex
    machine and youd like to examine it. There are
    three major ways
  • Anatomical
  • Neurophysiology
  • Psychophysical

6
Anatomic
  • Anatomic open it up and determine its structure,
    draw diagrams of the parts and their connections.
    For example, take apart a computer tower, youll
    find slots, cards, chips, etc.

7
Neurophysiological
  • 2. Neurophysiological determine the functions
    of the device, what each part does. For example
    take a voltmeter to the computer tower and
    measure different areas, see how much electrical
    energy goes where and in what directions.

8
Psychophysical
  • 3. Psychophysical determine the operation
    capabilities of the device. Input information,
    then observe and measure the changes to the
    machine. For example, a black box.

Input Output
From the input/output relationship, the
operational characteristics of the system are
determined.
9
Some Key Concepts in Psychophysics
  • The rest of this lecture will consist of key
    concepts in moderate detail
  • These are methods used to obtain psychophysical
    data
  • Enjoy

10
The Concept of the Threshold
  • How sensitive a sensory system is. 
  • Determined by measuring how much of a particular
    stimulus is required to reliably detect that
    stimulus
  • A sensory threshold represents the entrance of a
    stimulus into sensory existence. 
  • The threshold for a particular light stimulus is
    that intensity which allows it to be "just seen".

11
Method of Limits
  • Stimulus is either gradually increased (Ascending
    Series) or decreased (Descending Series) in
    intensity
  • The subject indicates on each trial (on each
    presentation) whether the stimulus was "seen" or
    "not seen"
  • (or felt, or heard, or smelled, etc.)

12
Method of Adjustment (MOA)
  • Subject controls the intensity of the stimulus. 
  • The subject adjusts the intensity until the
    stimulus is judged to be (in the case of a visual
    stimulus) "just visible"
  • For example, you keep turning your stereo up,
    louder and louder untill someone complains or
    youve lost hearing. haha.

13
Method of Constant Stimuli (MOCS)
  • The order of presentation of the stimulus is
    randomized, so the subject cannot anticipate the
    intensity of the stimulus on any given trial.
  • The percent (Y) responses can be plotted as a
    function of stimulus strength, and a psychometric
    function (math) can be described

14
Forced-Choice Procedures (FC)
  • Subjects are presented with two or more
    alternatives, and must select one on each trial
    even if the stimulus was not clearly seen. 
  • The choice can thus be coded as a criterion-free
    "correct" or "incorrect". 
  • Alternatives can be presented sequentially
    (temporal forced-choice), or can be presented
    simultaneously (spatial forced-choice).
  • There must be at least two alternatives, but
    there can be up to four or five.

15
Forced-Choice Procedures
Here is an example of a three-alternative spatial
forced-choice task (color discrimination). 
Since there are more than 2 choices,
forced-choice becomes an "oddity" task, that is,
the subject's taks is to choose the "odd" (i.e.,
different looking)
16
Absolute Thresholds and Difference Thresholds
  • Absolute Threshold- the amount of a stimulus
    required to simply detect it against a
    background (e.g., detecting light in an
    absolutely dark room). 
  • Difference Threshold, defined as the size of the
    difference between two stimuli required in order
    to just tell them apart. 
  • Another word for the Difference Threshold is the
    Just-Noticeable Difference (JND).

17
Weber's Law
  • JND is not an absolute amount of stimulus, but is
    a constant proportion of the background
    "standard" stimulus, IO.  The larger increments
    required for them to be "seen" on "standard"
    backgrounds of increasing intensity is
    illustrated in the three figures.

18
Thus, the more intense (or larger) the background
stimulus, the larger the increment needed to be
in order for it to be detected on top of the
background.
Weber's Law
19
Sensory Scaling
  • Stimuli which exceed threshold are referred to as
    suprathreshold.  
  • Measuring and expressing the relationship of
    suprathreshold stimuli to each other is  referred
    to as sensory scaling.

20
Sensory Scaling
  • Magnitude Estimation Subjects assign numerical
    values to the strength of stimuli
  • Magnitude Production subject adjusts the
    intensity of a stimulus to equal a prescribed
    numerical value. 
  • Cross-Modal Matching subject might be asked to
    adjust the brightness of a visual stimulus until
    it is judged to be as bright as an auditory
    stimulus is loud.

21
Signal Detection Theory
  • Signal Detection Theory analyze the performance
    of telecommunication systems (which transmit and
    receive information, as do nervous systems).  

22
Want More Details?
  • http//www.psychology.psych.ndsu.nodak.edu/mccourt
    /website/htdocs/HomePage/Psy460/Visual20psychophy
    sics/Visual20psychophysics.html
  • Have any questions?
  • svec_at_unr.nevada.edu

23
The End Thank You
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