Dissimilarity cumulation theory in arc-connected spaces
From MaRDI portal
Publication:926872
DOI10.1016/j.jmp.2008.01.005zbMath1134.91580OpenAlexW1969469666MaRDI QIDQ926872
Publication date: 21 May 2008
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Psychology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmp.2008.01.005
convexityarc lengthdissimilarityoriented distanceregular minimalitystimulus spacepath lengthFechnerian scalingdiscrimination probabilityMenger-convex spacesame-different judgements
Related Items
The equivalence of two ways of computing distances from dissimilarities for arbitrary sets of stimuli, Dissimilarity cumulation theory in smoothly connected spaces, Dissimilarity cumulation theory and subjective metrics, Characterization of geodesics in the small in multidimensional psychological spaces
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Multidimensional Fechnerian scaling: Regular variation version
- Dissimilarity cumulation theory in smoothly connected spaces
- Thurstonian-type representations for ``same-different discriminations: deterministic decisions and independent images.
- Thurstonian-type representations for ``same-different discriminations: probabilistic decisions and interdependent images.
- Psychophysics without physics: a purely psychological theory of fechnerian scaling in continuous stimulus spaces
- Multidimensional Fechnerian scaling: probability-distance hypothesis.
- Multidimensional Fechnerian scaling: Perceptual separability.
- Multidimensional Fechnerian scaling: Pairwise comparisons, regular minimality, and nonconstant self-similarity.
- Reconstructing distances among objects from their discriminability
- Dissimilarity cumulation theory and subjective metrics
- Psychophysics without physics: extension of Fechnerian scaling from continuous to discrete and discrete-continuous stimulus spaces
- On the law of regular minimality. Reply to: ``Sources and influence of perceptual variance: comment on Dzhafarov's regular minimality principle by D. M. Ennis.
- Metric spaces, convexity and nonpositive curvature
- Multidimensional Fechnerian scaling: basics