
Psychophysical Judgment and Measurement
- 1st Edition - November 28, 1974
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Editor: Edward Carterette
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 4 1 4 2 1 8 - 3
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 3 2 3 - 1 4 5 3 4 - 3
Handbook of Perception, Volume II: Psychophysical Judgment and Measurement brings together a very large, diverse, and widely scattered literature on human perception, with emphasis… Read more

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Request a sales quoteHandbook of Perception, Volume II: Psychophysical Judgment and Measurement brings together a very large, diverse, and widely scattered literature on human perception, with emphasis on psychophysical judgement and measurement. The book reviews the history of research on choice, judgement, and measurement in order to provide a background for contemporary work. This volume is organized into five sections encompassing 14 chapters and begins with a historical background on psychophysics and the evolution of thinking about the central measurement problem in judgement. The basic psychological context in which choice and judgement occur is considered next, touching on topics such as the problem of information selection and the sources of bias and variability in judgemental processes in relation to memory. The chapters that follow discuss the theoretical frame of measurement models and their applications. In particular, examples of algebraic fundamental measurement, algebraic derived measurement, and probabilistic derived measurement are given. The book also introduces the reader to various psychophysical scaling methods and theories of scaling. This book will serve as a basic source and reference work for psychologists and natural scientists, as well as for anyone in the arts or sciences or those who are interested in human perception.
List of Contributors
Foreword
Preface
Contents of Other Volumes
Part I. Introduction and Overview
Chapter 1. History of Psychophysics and Judgment
I. Fechnerian Psychophysics
II. Opposing Development in Psychophysical Measurement
III. The Threshold Concept
IV. Origin and Rise of the "Direct Methods" of Psychophysics
V. Special Topics
VI. Final Comments
References
Part II. Perceptual Choice and Judgment
Chapter 2. Attention: The Processing of Multiple Sources of Information
I. Introduction
II. Intermodality Attention
III. Visual Attention
IV. Auditory Attention
V. Attention and Meaning
VI. Other Information Combination
VII. Response Competition
VIII. Theories in Conclusion
References
Chapter 3. Memory Processes and Judgment
I. Introduction
II. Delayed Comparisons
III. Identifications
IV. Conclusion
References
Chapter 4. Psychological Decision Mechanisms and Perception
I. Introduction
II. The Psychological Trace
III. The Statistical Trace
IV. Desire and Percept
V. Psychophysics and Pay-Offs
VI. The Value of Money
VII. Concluding Expectorations
References
Chapter 5. Contextual Effects: A Range-Frequency Analysis
I. Introduction
II. Range Effects
III. Frequency Effects
IV. A Range-Frequency Model
V. Comments
References
Chapter 6. Personality and Social Effects in Judgment
I. Introduction
II. Social Functions of Judgment
III. The Relationship of Personality and Social Psychology to the Psychology of Judgment
References
Part III. Measurement Models and Applications
Chapter 7. Stimulus and Response Measurement
I. Introduction
II. Algebraic Models
III. Probabilistic Models
References
Chapter 8. Algebraic Models in Perception
I. Introduction
II. Linear Models and Averaging Models
III. Multiplying Models
IV. Psychological Measurement
References
Chapter 9. Detection, Discrimination, and Recognition
I. Introduction
II. Classification Scheme
III. Theories for Fixed-Interval Designs
IV. Operating Characteristics and Psychometric Functions for Fixed-Interval Designs with Two Stimuli
V. Nonstationary Response Processes
VI. Theories for Free-Response Data
References
Part IV. Scaling
Chapter 10. Overview of Psychophysical Scaling Methods
I. Introduction
II. The Indirect Methods
III. The Direct Methods
References
Chapter 11. Perceptual Magnitude and Its Measurement
I. Introduction
II. Fechner's Law
III. The Power Law
IV. Cross-Modality Matching
V. The Role of Exponents
VI. Neurelectric Power Functions
VII. Two Kinds of Perceptual Continua
VIII. Category Scale
IX. Virtual Exponents
X. Magnitude Estimation of Intervals
XI. Production of Sums
XII. The Partition Puzzle
XIII. Thresholds and the NQ
References
Part V. Multidimensional Scaling for Measurement of Human Perception
Chapter 12. Multidimensional Perceptual Models and Measurement Methods
I. Introduction
II. Theoretical and Mathematical Considerations
III. Methods Based on Non-Euclidean Metric
References
Chapter 13. Applications of Individual Differences Scaling to Studies of Human Perception and Judgment
I. Introduction
II. The INDSCAL Model
III. Introduction to Applications
IV. A Reanalysis of Helm's Color Perception Data
V. Perception of Colors Differing in Hue, Value, and Chroma
VI. Perception of Rhythm and Accent in Words and Phrases
VII. Perception of Acoustically Degraded Consonants
VIII. Perceptions of Nations: Subgroup and Task Variation
Summary
References
Chapter 14. Applications of Multidimensional Scaling in Perception
I. Multidimensional Scaling (MDS)
II. Examples of Application in Perception
III. Significance of Multidimensional Scaling in Studies of Perception
References
Author Index
Subject Index
- Edition: 1
- Published: November 28, 1974
- No. of pages (eBook): 580
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN: 9780124142183
- eBook ISBN: 9780323145343
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