Implications of marginal and conditional detection parameters for the separabilities and independence of perceptual dimensions (Q1206413)
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English | Implications of marginal and conditional detection parameters for the separabilities and independence of perceptual dimensions |
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Implications of marginal and conditional detection parameters for the separabilities and independence of perceptual dimensions (English)
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1 April 1993
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The second author and \textit{F. G. Ashby} [see `` The stochastic modeling of elementary psychological processes.'' (1983; Zbl 0595.92015)] developed a theory and related methodology for assessing various types of perceptual independence within recognition accuracy experiments. A special case of considerable importance was the General Gaussian Recognition Model based on multivariate normal distributions with arbitrary covariance matrices across stimuli. The General Recognition model can also be viewed as a multidimensional extension of signal detection theory and thereby yields two sets of signal detection analyses, macro- and microanalyses introduced earlier by the second author and his colleagues. The present work develops logical relationships among these two sets of signal detection parameters and the various concepts of ``perceptual independence'' including perceptual and decisional separability, marginal response invariance, sampling independence, and perceptual independence. These relationships lead to new tests of the varieties of independence and permit a qualitative construction of the underlying perceptual space.
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general Gaussian recognition model
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types of perceptual independence
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recognition accuracy experiments
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multivariate normal distributions
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signal detection
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perceptual and decisional separability
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marginal response invariance
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sampling independence
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perceptual space
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